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July 31, 2009

House Backs $636 Billion Defense Bill

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004052.html
House Backs $636 Billion Defense Bill
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the slimey defense appropriations processes] [followup] [during the CW, the average yearly appropriation was roughly $300 billion (in fixed 2000 dollars; see my NSC book)] [$$$$] [after the 9/11 steep climb, it declined a little for 1-2 years (c. 2006) and now it’s back where it was, which is roughly twice what it was during the CW whene the US was up against the weight of the Soviets!] [use psci355] [*]
The House approved a $636 billion defense spending bill Thursday after voting to strip money for the controversial F-22 fighter. However, it left funding in place for several other military programs that the Obama administration said it does not want.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004052.html
House Backs $636 Billion Defense Bill
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the slimey defense appropriations processes] [followup] [during the CW, the average yearly appropriation was roughly $300 billion (in fixed 2000 dollars; see my NSC book)] [$$$$] [after the 9/11 steep climb, it declined a little for 1-2 years (c. 2006) and now it’s back where it was, which is roughly twice what it was during the CW whene the US was up against the weight of the Soviets!] [use psci355] [*]
The House approved a $636 billion defense spending bill Thursday after voting to strip money for the controversial F-22 fighter. However, it left funding in place for several other military programs that the Obama administration said it does not want.

The defense measure, which passed 400 to 30, was the last of 12 appropriations bills for 2010 to clear the House. [*]

Lawmakers bowed to a threat by President Obama to veto the spending bill if the F-22 funding remained. Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), who sponsored the legislation, also sponsored an amendment to cut the funding, which passed 269 to 165.

The White House also hinted that a veto might occur if the bill included funding for the VH-71 presidential helicopter and for an alternative engine program for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. But money for both programs remained, as did funding for other items the Pentagon does not want -- extra C-17 transport planes and F-18 jets, as well as the Kinetic Energy Interceptor, a missile defense program. [Obama must make good on this threat or forever hold his tongue on it] [he’ll never be in better position, what with Republican SecDef Gates squarely behind him, …] [*]

The Senate has not moved its version of the defense spending measure through committee yet, and a final bill will not emerge from conference negotiations until this fall at the earliest.
-- Ben Pershing
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Ethics and Appropriations Make Strange Bedfellows

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073001431.html
Ethics and Appropriations Make Strange Bedfellows
By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 Raptor which was mostly designed for Cold War stuff!] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [congress persons attempting to sneak in earmarks and sometimes openly trawling for pork-barrel prizes for the home folk] [followup] [President Obama just won a round on the F22 last week and now congress slowly reverses the president’s victories] [*]
Members of the House ethics committee, who are investigating a pattern of lawmakers steering federal funds to generous defense contractors, have just had their own pet military projects approved by the same committee whose activities they are probing.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073001431.html
Ethics and Appropriations Make Strange Bedfellows
By Carol D. Leonnig
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 Raptor which was mostly designed for Cold War stuff!] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [congress persons attempting to sneak in earmarks and sometimes openly trawling for pork-barrel prizes for the home folk] [followup] [President Obama just won a round on the F22 last week and now congress slowly reverses the president’s victories] [*]
Members of the House ethics committee, who are investigating a pattern of lawmakers steering federal funds to generous defense contractors, have just had their own pet military projects approved by the same committee whose activities they are probing.

The 10 committee members sponsored 29 earmarks -- $59 million in federal funding for projects they requested in their districts or states -- under a military spending bill that passed the House on Thursday. The bill's details were approved last week by the House Appropriations defense subcommittee, whose practice of steering earmarks to clients of a well-connected lobbying firm close to the chairman, Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), is the subject of the ethics committee's investigation.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.), chairman of the ethics committee, would receive three earmarks worth $9.5 million under Murtha's bill. That includes $4 million to clean up contamination at a former military air base in Alameda, Calif.; $2 million for "printed and conformal" electronics research; and $3.5 million for Stanford University aeronautical research into the use of paraffin-based rocket fuel.

Last month, Lofgren's committee announced it was investigating the ties between members of Congress and PMA Group, a lobbying firm run by one of Murtha's close friends. It did not name the members, but Murtha and fellow defense appropriation members Peter J. Visclosky (D-Ind.) and James P. Moran (D-Va.) have longtime ties to PMA and have orchestrated hundreds of millions of dollars in earmarks to PMA clients in recent years. The PMA Group closed after an FBI raid late last year, and Visclosky's congressional records were subpoenaed in May by a grand jury investigating defense contracts.

Congressional ethics experts said the ethics committee earmarks create at least the appearance of a conflict of interest, and some in the public would naturally question how thoroughly the committee might investigate members on the subcommittee that granted their funding wishes.

"At the same time the committee is investigating the ties between lobby shops and earmarks and appropriators, they are actually playing the game themselves," said Steve Ellis, of the watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense. "It's hard not to see some conflict of interest in that."

Lofgren said she cannot quit advocating for good projects in her district because she leads the ethics panel, and she stands behind the worthiness of her requests. "When one is appointed to the ethics committee, one is not relieved of the responsibility to represent one's district," she said in a telephone interview.

She noted that the electronics research was something the administration also sought and that the rocket fuel research could lead to significant scientific advancements. "If this works, it's going to revolutionize space travel," Lofgren said.

Ranking minority member Jo Bonner (R-Ala.) would receive $5.3 million in requested funds for two research projects at two Alabama universities. Because of questions raised recently about the propriety of earmarks, he said, he decided not to request funding this year for projects that would benefit for-profit companies. He said he forwarded only requests for projects steering funding to universities, local governments and quasi-public entities.

Bonner said there will always be potential conflicts for the ethics committee, as its members sometimes investigate the actions of lawmakers who come from the same state, party or committee.

"We're striving in an imperfect system to do the work we've been elected to do; our job is to honor the institution and restore some semblance of confidence in it among the American people," he said. "Serving on the ethics committee should not disenfranchise the constituents of my district, or my state for that matter, to have worthy projects considered in an open and transparent process by the appropriations committee."

President Obama and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates have encouraged House leaders to remove billions of dollars of unwanted military projects from the measure. [*]

Jan Baran, a lawyer at Wiley Rein, said members rarely, if ever, volunteer for the ethics committee, and the conflicting goals are one reason. First, he said, lawmakers do not relish investigating their colleagues, and, second, they are in the business of building coalitions with colleagues to accomplish their agenda for their district and constituents.

"It's a little difficult to garner the support of a colleague if you are investigating him," Baran said. "These earmarks highlight the awkwardness that is inherent for a member who is serving on the ethics committee."

Murtha's spokesman declined to comment on the potential for an appearance of a conflict and said The Post's questions about earmarks were unwarranted. [*]

"I'm amazed at how desperate The Washington Post is at continuing their search for 'silly' stories involving Congressman Murtha," said Matthew Mazonkey. "It's yellow journalism at its finest." [*] [ouch; they are smarting]

Baran said that Lofgren's committee has a thankless job and that the public should evaluate the thoroughness of its investigation when it is completed. But, he stressed, the committee is not the only group looking at the web of House earmarks to defense firms that hire well-connected lobbyists and donate campaign funds to appropriators.

"You've got the FBI looking and grand juries apparently empaneled here," Baran said. "If there is something really wrong, it will come out in the form of an indictment."
Research editor Alice Crites contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

House Bucks President on Spending for Military

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/us/politics/31spend.html
July 31, 2009
House Bucks President on Spending for Military
By CHRISTOPHER DREW [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 Raptor which was mostly designed for Cold War stuff!] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [congress persons attempting to sneak in earmarks and sometimes openly trawling for pork-barrel prizes for the home folk] [followup] [President Obama just won a round on the F22 last week and now congress slowly reverses the president’s victories] [*]
WASHINGTON — The House on Thursday approved President Obama’s plan to kill the F-22 fighter jet. But Democratic leaders bucked White House veto threats on other programs, and they heatedly rejected a Republican effort to strip more than 550 earmarked expenditures from the $636 billion military bill. [incredible: now nobody bats an eyelash at nearly 3/4s of a trillion dollars for one year’s defense appropriation]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/us/politics/31spend.html
July 31, 2009
House Bucks President on Spending for Military
By CHRISTOPHER DREW [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 Raptor which was mostly designed for Cold War stuff!] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [congress persons attempting to sneak in earmarks and sometimes openly trawling for pork-barrel prizes for the home folk] [followup] [President Obama just won a round on the F22 last week and now congress slowly reverses the president’s victories] [*]
WASHINGTON — The House on Thursday approved President Obama’s plan to kill the F-22 fighter jet. But Democratic leaders bucked White House veto threats on other programs, and they heatedly rejected a Republican effort to strip more than 550 earmarked expenditures from the $636 billion military bill. [incredible: now nobody bats an eyelash at nearly 3/4s of a trillion dollars for one year’s defense appropriation] [during the CW (normalized in 2000 dollars) it was around 300 billion] [that is, the steep climb after 9/11 has hardly flattened out] [*]

Mr. Obama and other political leaders had hailed last week’s vote in the Senate to cancel the F-22 as a sign of their progress in changing military spending practices.

But in sometimes tense exchanges on the House floor on Thursday, two Republicans, Representatives Jeff Flake of Arizona and John Campbell of California, sought to embarrass some other representatives and to suggest that little had changed in how Congress pushes pet military projects.

While the House voted 269 to 165 to approve an amendment that stripped out money for building more F-22s, it overwhelmingly rejected efforts by Mr. Flake and Mr. Campbell to cut up to $2.7 billion in earmarks, including money that lawmakers had inserted on behalf of specific companies on 553 smaller projects. [Mr. Flake does this as a matter of principle (or a stunt, who knows?) and he knows he’s going to get shut down but he does it each year anyway] [good for him] [*]

The bill also included more than $1 billion to continue work on larger projects the administration wants to kill, like a new presidential helicopter, and nearly $1.2 billion for combat planes that the Pentagon did not request.

But in an echo of the Republican accusations of pork-barrel spending in the huge economic stimulus package this year, much of the debate on the military bill focused on earmarks like $1.5 million for a gunshot-detection system and $8 million for a project to upgrade torpedo capabilities.

Mr. Flake said $200 million of the earmarks were requested by companies that had been clients of the PMA Group, a lobbying firm that is under investigation over its ties to several congressmen, including Representative John P. Murtha, the influential Pennsylvania Democrat who was in charge of the bill.

Mr. Flake, a longtime critic of earmarks, said some of the companies had performed poorly on government work. He also said many of the companies had raised substantial amounts of campaign money for Mr. Murtha and others legislators, including Republicans, who sponsored their projects.

“That simply doesn’t look right,” Mr. Flake said, adding that the House “ought to want to have a higher standard.”

Mr. Murtha, who put together the bill as the chairman of the House military appropriations subcommittee, defended the practice and lashed out at Mr. Flake. [Murtha is a shadow of what he used to be] [he’s a simple automoton now for defense contractors and the Pentagon] [he used to be a contender?] [*]

Mr. Murtha said he had long sought earmarks as a way to create jobs in Pennsylvania. He said the state had sent a disproportionate number of soldiers to Iraq and Afghanistan compared with the level of military contracts it had typically received.

He said that he had an obligation to bring work to the small businesses in his area and that some of the earmarks, like $2.2 million for body-armor research, grew out of his visits with troops in Afghanistan and with wounded troops in hospitals.

“I’m not sure how often Mr. Flake goes to the hospital,” Mr. Murtha said.

Mr. Murtha, who was visibly angry, said several times that the bill included language instructing the Pentagon to seek competitive bids on the earmarked projects, and other lawmakers noted that Congress has the final say on spending decisions. [he’s been in congress too long when he losses his temper so easily over a minor skirmish] [*]

But Mr. Flake said that in the past, most companies that had sought the earmarks ended up with the contracts.

The overall bill, which would set military appropriations for 2010, passed by 400 to 30. The Senate will take up its version later this year, and the two bills will need to be reconciled in conference.

Mr. Obama had repeatedly threatened to veto any bill that included more money for the F-22, the world’s most advanced fighter, as the Pentagon seeks to shift more from high-tech weaponry to simpler systems the troops can use now.

After the Senate voted 58 to 40 last week to cancel the F-22, Mr. Murtha decided to give up the fight for it as well. He offered the amendment on Thursday that removed $369 million for parts, which had been meant to be a down payment toward 12 more planes.

The administration has also received support from Congress to scale back a $160 billion Army modernization plan and other programs.

But the White House warned this week that the president’s advisers would consider recommending a veto if the House went ahead with plans — as it did Thursday — to try to save the troubled effort to create a new presidential helicopter and to finance development of an alternative engine for another new fighter plane, the F-35. [it’s incredibly important that President Obam follow through on his threat] [*]

After Thursday’s vote, Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman, said the president had asked for a review of the House bill, including the earmarks.

Mr. Vietor said that over all, Congressional spending bills included 25 percent fewer earmarks this year than last year.

Still, he said, “We knew from the start that changing the old ways of Washington would not happen overnight.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Judge Orders Guantánamo Detainee to Be Freed

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/us/31gitmo.html
July 31, 2009
Judge Orders Guantánamo Detainee to Be Freed
By WILLIAM GLABERSON [Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Thursday ordered that one of the youngest detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, be released by late August [*]in a case that drew wide attention because of rulings that he had been tortured by Afghan officials and abused in American custody.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/us/31gitmo.html
July 31, 2009
Judge Orders Guantánamo Detainee to Be Freed
By WILLIAM GLABERSON [Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
WASHINGTON — A federal judge on Thursday ordered that one of the youngest detainees at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, be released by late August [*]in a case that drew wide attention because of rulings that he had been tortured by Afghan officials and abused in American custody.

“Enough has been imposed on this young man to date,” the judge, Ellen Segal Huvelle, said in a courtroom crowded with people drawn by what had become a confrontation between the judge and the Obama administration.

But it was not clear Thursday whether Judge Huvelle’s order will mean freedom for the detainee, Mohammed Jawad, who has long faced American charges that, as a teenager, he threw a hand grenade in Kabul in 2002 that injured two American servicemen and their Afghan interpreter.

The ruling on Thursday came after a concession by the government last week that it could no longer defend Mr. Jawad’s military detention in the habeas corpus case before Judge Huvelle. She had declared that the administration’s case for continuing his detention after nearly seven years was “riddled with holes” and that virtually all of the government’s evidence came from confessions he made after being threatened with death.

Justice Department officials said they were studying whether to file civilian criminal charges against Mr. Jawad. If they do, officials say, he could be transferred to the United States to face charges, instead of being sent to Afghanistan, where his lawyers say he would be released to his mother. [*]

“It is a very real possibility,” a Justice Department official said in an interview, “but whether we can compile enough evidence to support a case is a question we don’t yet know the answer to.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the department does not discuss investigations.

Mr. Jawad’s military lawyer, Maj. David J. R. Frakt, said he would file court challenges to any effort by the administration to move his client to the United States to face charges. But Major Frakt conceded that the Aug. 21 deadline Judge Huvelle gave the government to send Mr. Jawad to Afghanistan also gave prosecutors time to work on a grand jury investigation. [*]

“We have won the battle,” he said outside the federal courthouse here. “Have we won the war? Perhaps it remains to be seen.”

The Obama administration had asked for the 22 days to comply with a recently passed provision requiring that Congress be given 15-days notice of any detainee transfer. The administration said it needed an additional week to prepare the notice.

Mr. Jawad’s age is unknown, but his lawyers say he was 14 or 15 at the time of the grenade attack. Military prosecutors have been pursuing war crimes charges against Mr. Jawad in the military commission system at Guantánamo. But their case foundered after a military judge ruled last year that it was largely based on confessions Mr. Jawad gave after being tortured. [*] [geez, this judge is such a stickler for detail] [*]

Justice Department lawyers told Judge Huvelle they would no longer use those statements. But they said they had additional evidence, including witnesses to the attack.

From the bench on Thursday, Judge Huvelle criticized the government for what she described as inattention to the case and a “continuing pattern” of delay both by the Bush and Obama administrations. She said any prosecution would face difficulties, including what she said was a possible denial of Mr. Jawad’s right to a speedy trial and evidence that his treatment at Guantánamo was harsher than any juvenile defendant would face in the United States.
“I hope,” Judge Huvelle said, “the government will succeed in getting him sent back home.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

U.S. Diplomat Urges Revised Sudan Policy

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004123.html
U.S. Diplomat Urges Revised Sudan Policy
Inclusion on Terrorism List Challenged
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Iran presidential election (June 12)] [Obama’s national-security team] [vetted at high NSC levels] [however, probably mostly bureaucracy] [how the apex of policymaking (president-NSC-policymaking model) gets timely information from the larger bureaucracy and uses same for policymaking] [Islamic Maghreb and Horn of Africa] [Sudan] [under President W. Bush, the US called Darfur genocide—and deserves credit for doing so] [I don’t know whether the Obama people see it as part of some broader whole or what exactly] [use psci355] [followup] [*]
President Obama's top Sudan envoy said Thursday that there was no basis for keeping Sudan on the U.S. list of states that sponsor terrorism and that it was only a matter of

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004123.html
U.S. Diplomat Urges Revised Sudan Policy
Inclusion on Terrorism List Challenged
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Iran presidential election (June 12)] [Obama’s national-security team] [vetted at high NSC levels] [however, probably mostly bureaucracy] [how the apex of policymaking (president-NSC-policymaking model) gets timely information from the larger bureaucracy and uses same for policymaking] [Islamic Maghreb and Horn of Africa] [Sudan] [under President W. Bush, the US called Darfur genocide—and deserves credit for doing so] [I don’t know whether the Obama people see it as part of some broader whole or what exactly] [use psci355] [followup] [*]
President Obama's top Sudan envoy said Thursday that there was no basis for keeping Sudan on the U.S. list of states that sponsor terrorism and that it was only a matter of time before the United States would have to "unwind" economic sanctions against the Khartoum government.[*] [interesting]

Retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Scott Gration's remarks before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee represented the most forceful critique yet by a U.S. official of the long-standing American effort to put economic and political pressure on Sudan's Islamic government. Sudan, which has harbored members of al-Qaeda, including Osama bin Laden, was designated a terrorism sponsor in 1993. [*]

Gration's comments Thursday raised concerns among activists and Sudan's critics in Congress that the administration is offering to reward Sudan without securing assurances that the government will take steps to end conflict in the Darfur region and in the south.

The president's national security advisers have been locked in dispute over the right mix of rewards and penalties to persuade the Khartoum government to pursue peace in those regions. [*]Susan E. Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, has been pressing for a tougher approach, citing Khartoum's history of violating agreements.

The interagency feud became public last month, when Gration told reporters that Sudan's government was no longer engaging in a "coordinated" campaign of mass murder against Darfurian civilians. Two days earlier, Rice had said that Sudan was engaged in a campaign of genocide in Darfur. [relatively senior slots in the NSC hierarchy are openly fueding] [Jones needs to knock some heads together] [*]

"There is a significant difference between what happened in 2003, which we characterized as genocide, and what is happening today," Gration said Thursday.

Gration came under fire from human rights activists, who accused him of saying too little to the committee about the brutality of the Sudanese government, whose leader, President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, stands accused of war crimes in Darfur.

Also Thursday, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, in partnership with Google Earth, released a State Department analysis of U.S. satellite imagery showing that more than 3,300 Darfurian villages were damaged or destroyed between 2003 and 2005, more than twice previous estimates. [*]The images also showed that most of the destruction in Darfur occurred before 2006, with only a small number of villages apparently destroyed since then. [conclusion: since 2006 Khartoum has more or less lived by agreements and attempted to cooperate with US and others] [*]

Gration told the Senate committee that the administration would "roll out" a new, comprehensive strategy on Darfur in the next few weeks that would include "both incentives and pressure" for Khartoum. The administration's priorities, he said, include negotiating a durable political solution in Darfur and averting a collapse of a U.S.-brokered 2005 peace accord ending a war between Khartoum and southern-backed rebels.

But Gration hinted at the tensions over strategy, noting that the State Department had rejected a proposal to fund more U.S. diplomats or private contractors to help support American mediation efforts in Sudan. He said he would raise the issue at a higher level. [*]

Gration said U.S. economic sanctions had undermined American efforts to help implement the 2005 accord, barring the delivery of heavy equipment needed for road and rail projects in southern Sudan. He said the provision of such assistance would be vital in ensuring that southerners can establish a viable government if, as expected, they vote to secede from Sudan in a 2011 referendum.

"We're going to have to unwind some of these sanctions so that we can do the very things we need to do to ensure a peaceful transition to a state that is viable in the south, if they choose to do that," [*]he said.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

U.S. Takes Steps to Boost Security Cooperation With Russia

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004094.html
U.S. Takes Steps to Boost Security Cooperation With Russia
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Obama’s national-security team at NSC and bureaucratic levels] [Russia] [US-Russia relations] [followup] [questions include: how much does US hegemonic stability rely on keeping Russia part of the stability platform?] [at what costs does the US alienate Russia] [use psci355, 350] [cross in external] [*]
The United States is moving to deepen security cooperation with Russia as part of the Obama administration's effort to "reset" relations with Moscow, senior officials told Congress on Thursday.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073004094.html
U.S. Takes Steps to Boost Security Cooperation With Russia
By Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Obama’s national-security team at NSC and bureaucratic levels] [Russia] [US-Russia relations] [followup] [questions include: how much does US hegemonic stability rely on keeping Russia part of the stability platform?] [at what costs does the US alienate Russia] [use psci355, 350] [cross in external] [*]
The United States is moving to deepen security cooperation with Russia as part of the Obama administration's effort to "reset" relations with Moscow, senior officials told Congress on Thursday.

This week, a team of military experts went to Moscow for the first round of discussions on an early warning center that would assess the threat of ballistic missiles, including any from Iran or North Korea, the officials said. U.S. and Russian officials are also planning to hold talks in October to lay the groundwork for extensive military programs next year. [seems positive] [*]

"Hopefully, through this joint threat assessment, we can begin to chip away at some of the Russian misperceptions" about U.S. plans for missile defense elements in Europe, Alexander Vershbow, assistant secretary of defense for international security affairs, told members of the House Armed Services Committee.

Vershbow, a former U.S. ambassador to Moscow, said Russian "elites" exhibit "paranoia and worst-case assessments" about the U.S. plan to put a radar in the Czech Republic and 10 interceptors in Poland, but he added that dialogue could help soften those views.

Vershbow said that the highest priority for President Obama in recent talks with the Russians was Afghanistan, and that securing Moscow's agreement to allow the transit of U.S. troops and weapons through Russian air space was an important achievement. [*] "The Russians, I think, recognize that they, too, have a stake in defeating the Taliban and establishing a stable, democratic Afghanistan," Vershbow said. [yes, yes, I’m sure that’s at least partly true] [but more likely the Russians have concluded they want something] [it’s time to start digging into what it is they want?] [*]

He added that although Russia does not have a military presence in Afghanistan, it is participating in that country's counternarcotics programs, training Afghan police at a center in Moscow, and repairing Soviet-era bridges and tunnels that are improving access for commercial goods heading in and out of Afghanistan.

Officials said U.S. and Russian security interests overlap on nonproliferation and thwarting Iran's nuclear ambitions.

"I think we've seen cooperation with Russia on this issue and then other areas where they've been less helpful," said Philip Gordon, assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs. [*]

He said that although some officials in Washington and in other capitals are concerned about Moscow's relations with Iran, "Russia has refrained from moving forward with what would be really considered more destabilizing arms transfers to Iran or steps in the nuclear area that would be provocative to us and others."

There remain disagreements between Russia and the United States, such as over U.S. support for Georgia and the enlargement of NATO. [not solvable in the short term] [*]

"The predominant view in Russia is that they're better off dominating their neighbors, even if that means instability than accepting the choices of those neighbors -- unfortunately," Gordon said.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Pressing Pyongyang On Rights

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073002839.html
Pressing Pyongyang On Rights
By Roberta Cohen
Friday, July 31, 2009 [oped] [on DPRK and what’s happening over the past ocuple of months] [bombastic behavior but that’s hardly new] [but something else?] [apparently the Dear Leader has only a few years left before he goes to that big proletariat comune in the sky?] [*]
The now-defunct six-party talks in which the United States, South Korea, Japan, Russia and China participated focused almost exclusively on North Korea's nuclear weapons program. But with a struggle for succession underway in Pyongyang and some of the country's internal controls reportedly beginning to erode, it's time to rethink the near-exclusion of human rights from the U.S.-North Korean dialogue.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073002839.html
Pressing Pyongyang On Rights
By Roberta Cohen
Friday, July 31, 2009 [oped] [on DPRK and what’s happening over the past ocuple of months] [bombastic behavior but that’s hardly new] [but something else?] [apparently the Dear Leader has only a few years left before he goes to that big proletariat comune in the sky?] [*]
The now-defunct six-party talks in which the United States, South Korea, Japan, Russia and China participated focused almost exclusively on North Korea's nuclear weapons program. But with a struggle for succession underway in Pyongyang and some of the country's internal controls reportedly beginning to erode, it's time to rethink the near-exclusion of human rights from the U.S.-North Korean dialogue.

The fear of raising human rights issues has been based largely on the belief that doing so would distract from efforts to disable North Korea's nuclear weapons program. But past negotiations focused narrowly on nuclear weapons have not produced sustainable outcomes, and they are unlikely to do so in the future unless they are grounded in a broader and more solid framework. Discussions about access to North Korea and the freer movement of people, information and ideas across its borders are needed to reinforce nuclear verification and inspections. The nature of the North Korean regime has bearing on its conduct at home and abroad. [at this point, I’m not certain that much is lost by broadening the talks out] [if the US was tiptoeing for the two female journalists, it hasn’t worked well] [*]

Concern has also been expressed that North Korea could become defiant, or even implode, if rights became a focus. But a carefully developed strategy to incorporate human rights into talks could avoid the kind of collapse that could overwhelm the South with refugees and rehabilitation costs by seeking to gradually pry open North Korea's closed society. This would involve identifying the human rights issues where progress might be achievable and moving forward on those areas first.

Families separated by the Korean War and, more recently, by famine, extreme poverty or political persecution in the North could be a starting point. Although North Korea has allowed inter-Korean talks about family reunions, these have produced only brief visits to the North for 1,600 of the 125,000 South Koreans who have applied. The International Committee of the Red Cross, which has expert tracing and reunification facilities and is present in Pyongyang, should be brought in to speed up responses to requests, especially from people over 70 for whom further delays could mean never seeing their families again.

Another achievable goal could be the liberation of the children and grandchildren of political prisoners in labor camps. Not only are North Koreans arbitrarily confined for "wrong thinking," "wrong knowledge" and "wrong doing," but up to three generations of their family members can be imprisoned as well. According to one camp escapee, because of this guilt by association, small children are forced to haul coal in underground mines and watch the executions of family members. Surely releasing them would pose no conceivable danger to North Korea's government, and this could serve as an entry point to longer-term discussions about the estimated 150,000 to 200,000 political prisoners held in brutal conditions. [*]

Above all, the strategy should focus on securing greater access to North Korea. After years of negotiations, there has been progress on the humanitarian front. In 2008, for instance, Pyongyang agreed to allow greater access to relief workers bringing in food, to let them conduct inspections of food distribution with 24-hour notification and to permit Korean-speaking staff members. Though many of these concessions were withdrawn this year and need to be reinstated, a foundation was established.

Comparable efforts must be exerted to gain access for international human rights workers. For more than five years, North Korea has refused entry to the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in North Korea, denied visits by the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights and barred the Red Cross from seeing prisoners or foreign citizens abducted to the North. Nor has North Korea accepted the standards of the International Labor Organization so that the ILO can investigate labor camps and factories. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees has not been able to screen North Koreans who have fled to China or monitor the plight of those forced back into North Korea. It is time for the United States, together with U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, to mobilize a group of states with influence with North Korea to press for compliance with the goals and programs of the United Nations. A coherent plan would bring together all the disparate U.N. agencies and offices that seek human rights improvements in North Korea. [now the author is throwing in things that are likely decades down the road—unless, as there is some indication, Kim Jong Il is dying and his successor (presumably the Brilliant Comrade, aka Cute Leader) can get firm grip on the machinery and has the Western tilt some think] [*]

Finally, the creation of an organization for peace and security in Northeast Asia should be a central aim of this new strategy, one that would expand the discussion among the six parties beyond strategic, economic and energy issues to include human rights and humanitarian concerns once multilateral talks resume. North Korea has already ratified the major international human rights agreements and might be more willing to face up to its international obligations within a regional framework from which it could gain political and economic benefits. Former ambassador James Goodby, who helped set up the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, has argued, in a paper written while he was at the Brookings Institution, that a comparable framework for Asia could be "a much-needed agent for change" and help to hold governments accountable for the treatment of their people. With Kim Jong Il ailing and the future of the country uncertain, there may now be an opportunity to add human rights to the agenda.
The writer is a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, specializing in humanitarian and human rights issues, and a board member of the Committee for Human Rights in North Korea.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Rockets for Terrorists

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003329.html
Rockets for Terrorists
Will there be any consequence for Venezuela's material support for Colombian insurgents?
Friday, July 31, 2009 [editorial] [on Chavez’s regime and the allegations recently that it was transshipping armaments (and serious ones) to FARC in Colombia] [if true, a huge problem] [if true, it shows Hugo to be stupider that I thought] [*]
WHEN THE Colombian government last year unveiled extensive evidence that the government of Venezuela had collaborated with a Colombian rebel movement known for terrorism and drug trafficking, other Latin American governments and the United States mostly chose to look the other way. The evidence was contained on laptops captured in a controversial raid by the Colombian army on a guerrilla base in Ecuador. Venezuelan

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003329.html
Rockets for Terrorists
Will there be any consequence for Venezuela's material support for Colombian insurgents?
Friday, July 31, 2009 [editorial] [on Chavez’s regime and the allegations recently that it was transshipping armaments (and serious ones) to FARC in Colombia] [if true, a huge problem] [if true, it shows Hugo to be stupider that I thought] [*]
WHEN THE Colombian government last year unveiled extensive evidence that the government of Venezuela had collaborated with a Colombian rebel movement known for terrorism and drug trafficking, other Latin American governments and the United States mostly chose to look the other way. The evidence was contained on laptops captured in a controversial raid by the Colombian army on a guerrilla base in Ecuador. Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez denounced the e-mails and documents as forgeries, and the potential consequences of concluding that Venezuela was supporting a terrorist organization against a democratic government -- which could include mandatory U.S. sanctions and referral to the U.N. Security Council -- were more than the Bush administration was prepared to contemplate.

Now Colombia has made public evidence that will be even more difficult to ignore. In a raid on a camp of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC), a group officially designated a terrorist organization by the United States and the European Union, Colombian forces captured sophisticated, Swedish-produced antitank rockets. A Swedish investigation confirmed that they were originally sold to the Venezuelan army by the arms manufacturer Saab. [*]What's more, FARC e-mails from the laptops captured in Ecuador appear to refer to the weapons; in one, a FARC operative in Caracas reports discussing delivery of the arms in a 2007 meeting with two top Venezuelan generals, including the director of military intelligence, Hugo Armando Carvajal Barrios.

Colombia privately asked Mr. Chávez's government for an explanation of the rockets several months ago; Sweden is now asking as well. But the only response has been public bluster by the Venezuelan caudillo, who on Tuesday withdrew his ambassador from Colombia and threatened to close the border to trade. [which doesn’t definitively mean anything but it sures looks like tacit admission of guilt] [*] If he follows through, U.S. drug authorities may well be pleased: A report released last week by the U.S. Government Accountability Office said Venezuela had created a "permissive environment" for FARC that had allowed the group to massively increase its cocaine smuggling across that border. "By allowing illegal armed groups to elude capture and by providing material support, Venezuela has extended a lifeline to Colombian illegal armed groups, and their continued existence endangers Colombian security gains achieved with U.S. assistance," the GAO reported.

This all sounds an awful lot like material support for terrorism -- which raises the question of whether the State Department will look again at whether Mr. Chávez's government or its top officials belong on its list of state sponsors of terrorism. The Bush administration's Treasury Department last year imposed sanctions on Gen. Carvajal and several other officials for supporting the FARC's drug trafficking. But that hardly covers the supply of antitank rockets to a designated terrorist organization. At the moment, the State Department is busy applying sanctions to members of Honduras's de facto government, which is guilty of deposing one of Mr. Chávez's clients and would-be emulators. Perhaps soon it can turn its attention to those in the hemisphere who have been caught trying to overturn a democratic government by supplying terrorists with advanced weapons.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Kurdistan Contradicts Itself

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/opinion/31hall.html
July 31, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor
Kurdistan Contradicts Itself
By BENJAMIN HALL
Sulaimaniya, Iraq [oped] [on Kuridstan and –Iraq’s future] [does it have one with Kurdish Kirkuk?] [*]
FROM my hotel balcony I can see this city of nearly 700,000 in all its modernity and all its madness. I can see the desiccated mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan encircling us — hills that on my last visit, during the rainy season, were covered in poppies. I can see the Ferris wheel that was built as a symbol of freedom on the ruins of one of Saddam Hussein’s prisons. And I can see 20 armed soldiers watching me from below, making

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/opinion/31hall.html
July 31, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor
Kurdistan Contradicts Itself
By BENJAMIN HALL
Sulaimaniya, Iraq [oped] [on Kuridstan and –Iraq’s future] [does it have one with Kurdish Kirkuk?] [*]
FROM my hotel balcony I can see this city of nearly 700,000 in all its modernity and all its madness. I can see the desiccated mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan encircling us — hills that on my last visit, during the rainy season, were covered in poppies. I can see the Ferris wheel that was built as a symbol of freedom on the ruins of one of Saddam Hussein’s prisons. And I can see 20 armed soldiers watching me from below, making me feel anything but free.

This is Sulaimaniya. I can see mosques around the city and I can hear their calls to prayer. Against all Islamic principles, I can drink mojitos in my hotel lobby and was once invited to watch pornography on the bellboy’s cellphone.

Kurdish politics are just as full of contradictions. Since Iraqi Kurdistan gained de facto independence in 1991, it has been governed by either the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan or the Kurdistan Democratic Party. [PUK or KDP] [*] After the fall of Saddam Hussein, the two formed a coalition, resulting in a government whose corruption and cronyism went unchallenged.

Last Saturday, however, this region went to the polls, and a real opposition emerged: Gorran, whose name means “change.” Gorran came in a respectable second to the ruling coalition with 24 percent of the votes for Parliament seats. But can Gorran, which was formed only three months ago, really be considered a legitimate force for change? [in Kurdish, Gorran means Change] [*]

First the good news: Here is a group that hopes to abolish the backroom dealing and autocracy that have long stifled Kurdish politics. During the campaign, Gorran’s candidates called for transparency and accountability, and even claimed they would prosecute corrupt former leaders.

Yet despite all the reformist rhetoric, Gorran is seen by some as an offshoot of the ruling faction. It is headed by Nawshirwan Mustafa, who was formerly a top official in the Patriotic Union. It has taken large donations from former politicians suspected of corruption. And it is rumored to have had backing from the Shiite-led Iraqi central government, [those are some serious issues to deal with] [*] which many Kurds insist is bent on destabilizing the region to take control of its oil.

Nonetheless, I have spent enough time with Gorran’s leaders and supporters to believe that they are earnest in wanting to make a difference, and I think they won enough seats in the regional Parliament to do so.

The people of Sulaimaniya also seem to think Gorran is for real; its candidates received about 51 percent of the vote here. On Sunday, supporters celebrated and draped Gorran flags over me wherever I went. But as the regionwide results trickled in — alongside reports of fraud — the mood began to change to one of suspicion and anger, and violence seemed likely.

By the end of the day, at least one person was dead and a dozen injured by gunfire; witnesses claimed that the gunmen were loyalists of Massoud Barzani, who was re-elected on Saturday as regional president. Several Gorran offices were ransacked. At Gorran headquarters, I had to push through bloodied supporters just to get in — they said they had been attacked by local Patriotic Union militia with rifle butts.

Just the other night I saw a Gorran supporter pulled from a car and dragged away, but I also saw people drinking tea in the streetside cafes as they watched the protests die down. The violence consisted of little more than a few thrown water bottles.

A few years ago, something like this would have certainly led to widespread unrest.

Thus it can be seen as a victory of sorts that most Kurds seem to be at home with their families, grumbling perhaps, but more occupied with watching mindless TV than with politics. [*]Among their favorites are “Gardalul,” a campy series about valiant Kurdish militia fighters, and “Kurdstar,” a version of “American Idol” limited to only one genre of music: traditional Kurdish folk songs. While the contestants may not have a real choice, it appears that Iraqi Kurdish voters finally do.
Benjamin Hall is the author of the blog Out of the Ashes.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

The Settlements Issue

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/opinion/31fri1.html
July 31, 2009
Editorial
The Settlements Issue
[editorial] [Obama administration and the slow movement of special-interest forces against his position on Israeli settlements] [actually, it’s not all that slow] [sinc3e his Cairo speech, this has been inexorable] [*]
The last American president to openly challenge Israel on settlements was George H.W. Bush and we commend President Obama for demanding that Israel halt all new construction. The controversy must not obscure Mr. Obama’s real goal: nudging Israel and the Palestinians into serious peace negotiations.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/opinion/31fri1.html
July 31, 2009
Editorial
The Settlements Issue
[editorial] [Obama administration and the slow movement of special-interest forces against his position on Israeli settlements] [actually, it’s not all that slow] [sinc3e his Cairo speech, this has been inexorable] [*]
The last American president to openly challenge Israel on settlements was George H.W. Bush and we commend President Obama for demanding that Israel halt all new construction. The controversy must not obscure Mr. Obama’s real goal: nudging Israel and the Palestinians into serious peace negotiations.

Mr. Obama and his negotiator, George Mitchell, have focused on settlements after prying loose a commitment — highly caveated — from Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a two-state solution. The Palestinians insist they won’t return to talks until all construction halts. The Americans have decided that a freeze is needed to show Palestinians and other Arabs that Israel’s conservative government is serious about peace. [in my mind, it’s needed for the symbolism of showing the US is serious about being a honest broker] [whether ultimately settlements are frozen or, more likely, much smaller increments of increase result, the symbolism is terribly important] [the Bush administration (but Clinton before) was overtly proIsrael on virtually every matter that arose and it’s a bit difficult to get Palestinians to negotiate in good faith when they view negotations and getting screwed on the installment plan] [*]

Less visibly, but we hope just as assertively, the administration is pressing the Palestinians and other Arab leaders to take concrete steps to demonstrate their commitment to a peace deal. Those must clearly contribute to Israel’s sense of security.

Unless all sides deliver — the Palestinians, Arabs and Israelis — Mr. Obama’s credibility and the credibility of the peace process will be undermined.

The ultimate question of who controls which land will have to be resolved at the peace table with border negotiations and land swaps. Right now, some 300,000 Israeli settlers live in the West Bank; 200,000 in East Jerusalem. And the continued expansion of Israeli settlements has led Palestinians to doubt they will ever be allowed to build a viable state. The issue has also given Arab states a far too convenient excuse for inaction.

While Israeli governments have repeatedly promised to halt settlement activity — and no new settlements have been approved in nearly two decades — existing ones have continued to mushroom with government incentives. According to Americans for Peace Now, an activist group, 4,560 new housing units were built when Ehud Olmert was prime minister. Mr. Netanyahu has rejected demands for a freeze and insisted that “natural growth” (to accommodate births) must be allowed.

Under pressure from Washington, Mr. Netanyahu’s government has dangled a possible compromise: a temporary freeze in new construction, as long as 2,500 units now in process can be completed and Arab East Jerusalem is exempt. It is a weak offer.

While they press the Israelis, Mr. Obama and Mr. Mitchell are also asking the Palestinians and Arab states to do more. They are insisting that the Palestinians work harder to prevent incitement against Israel in schools and the media. They have asked Arab states — notably Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Syria — to signal the beginning of an acceptance by allowing Israel to fly commercial planes through Arab airspace or open government commercial offices in their capitals. They are also pressing Arab states to provide more aid for the fragile government of the Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas.

President Obama and Mr. Mitchell claim they are making progress, but so far there is little sign of it. Saudi Arabia, which has pushed Washington hard to revive negotiations, has been especially resistant. Mr. Mitchell would do well to remind them that a prolonged stalemate will only feed extremism across the region.

Israeli leaders do not often risk being at odds with an American president, but polls show broad support for Mr. Netanyahu’s resistance. President Obama, a skilled communicator, has started a constructive dialogue with the Islamic world. Now he needs to explain to Israelis why freezing settlements and reviving peace talks is clearly in their interest.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Honduras: Clashes at Protests

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/americas/31briefs-hondbrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Honduras: Clashes at Protests
By GINGER THOMPSON [Honduras] [Central America] [banana republic behavior?] [another military coup situation?] [not clear] [Latin America] [bizaare standoff with poor campesinos supportive of overthrown president and middle-to-upper middle class and above awkwardly behind extraconstitutional means] [followup] [*]
Several people were wounded and more than 100 were arrested Thursday during clashes between the police and supporters of the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, in at

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/americas/31briefs-hondbrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Honduras: Clashes at Protests
By GINGER THOMPSON [Honduras] [Central America] [banana republic behavior?] [another military coup situation?] [not clear] [Latin America] [bizaare standoff with poor campesinos supportive of overthrown president and middle-to-upper middle class and above awkwardly behind extraconstitutional means] [followup] [*]
Several people were wounded and more than 100 were arrested Thursday during clashes between the police and supporters of the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya, in at least four locations. The most intense violence occurred on the northern edge of Tegucigalpa, the capital, where one person was shot in the head. Leaders of the demonstrations accused the police of firing tear gas and live ammunition on peaceful protesters. Television footage showed some protesters armed with long sticks and pickaxes.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

German Program Cuts Jobless Ranks, for Now

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/europe/31germany.html
July 31, 2009
German Program Cuts Jobless Ranks, for Now
By NICHOLAS KULISH [Germany] [Berlin] [EU3] [German politics] [incumbency corruptions like nearly everywhere else] [Germany’s ethos] [use psci350] [*]
REUTLINGEN, Germany — Even as the German economy suffers through its worst slump since World War II, the government unveiled a seemingly happy surprise on Thursday: Not many people lost their jobs last month.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/europe/31germany.html
July 31, 2009
German Program Cuts Jobless Ranks, for Now
By NICHOLAS KULISH [Germany] [Berlin] [EU3] [German politics] [incumbency corruptions like nearly everywhere else] [Germany’s ethos] [use psci350] [*]
REUTLINGEN, Germany — Even as the German economy suffers through its worst slump since World War II, the government unveiled a seemingly happy surprise on Thursday: Not many people lost their jobs last month.

So has Germany escaped the ravages of the downturn? Probably not, economists say. [*] The apparent resilience of the labor market is more indicative of a peculiarly German approach to combating the punishing recession than of underlying trends in the economy. Germany has found creative ways to keep people off the jobless rolls, whether they have work to do or not.

Politicians laud the measures, which aim to keep unemployed people nominally on someone’s payroll, as a bridge over the steepest period of economic collapse. But many economists argue that the short-term jobless statistics may mask a less optimistic trend that could undermine confidence in the fall, when recovery is supposed to take hold. [Germans have some pretty deep fears of hyperinflation and where that can lead society with charalatan charismatics taking advantage] [*]

“The Achilles’ heel is in the coming months,” said Ulrich Wortberg, analyst at Landesbank Hessen-Thüringen. “The recovery is filled with risks.”

The number of unemployed in Germany showed a moderate rise of 52,000 in July. Compared with the same period a year ago, 252,000 people have lost jobs.

Those figures are dwarfed by the increase of six million in the number of jobless over the past year in the United States, even allowing that Germany has a little more than one-fourth the population of the United States. Where the unemployment rate in the United States soared to 9.5 percent in June compared with 5.6 percent the year before, the German unemployment rate was 8.2 percent in July compared with 7.7 percent a year ago.

With Chancellor Angela Merkel seeking re-election in September, the unemployment numbers have real political implications. While there are no suggestions of any tinkering with the data, it is widely noted in Germany that both government and big business have an incentive to lift people’s spirits so close to the election.

“At the end of the day, German corporations will have to restructure anyway, will have to downsize capacities,” said Eckart Tuchtfeld, senior economist at Commerzbank. “And that contributes, of course, to our picture of a somewhat subdued recovery, particularly in Germany, because of the lags in reaction to the economic crisis.”

Economists estimate that the government-subsidized program of short working hours — known as Kurzarbeit — has helped avert roughly 400,000 layoffs so far, with 1.3 million to 1.4 million people in the short-time program, according to government estimates. But with the economy expected to shrink by at least 6 percent this year, experts say that stopgap measure will give way at last to a far bigger wave of layoffs this fall, after the election.

Metin Marul was let go from his assembly-line job at a Mercedes supplier near Stuttgart in May. He still has not found a new position to replace the one he lost. Yet according to the government, he is not unemployed.

Mr. Marul, 42, is one of about 60 employees from the closed factory who ended up instead on the rolls of what is known in Germany as a transfer company. At an office in Reutlingen run by the company MyPegasus, Mr. Marul, a Turkish-born immigrant, works on his résumé, talks to an adviser about how to look for work and can take courses to advance his technical skills or improve his non-native German.

He can also collect roughly 80 percent of his salary for a year, with the costs split between the government and his former employer. “It’s better for me at the transfer company, because I can learn here and look for work,” Mr. Marul said.

At the Wadan shipyard in the northern state of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania, nearly 2,500 workers are expected to enter a transfer company, with the state government putting up more than $20 million to cover the shipyard’s share of the expense. Daniel Friedrich, a spokesman for the union IG Metall, called the state’s decision to ensure that a transfer company could be set up a “responsible” one, but said the union was worried about the future.

“The fear is there that after the Bundestag election, firms will pull back from short-time work and instead go ahead with more layoffs. At that point the subject of transfer companies will automatically take on a new dynamic,” Mr. Friedrich said.

MyPegasus has 20 permanent offices around Germany, but right now it has an additional 30 temporary offices, set up on a project-by-project basis. The company’s executive director, Rainer Schwille, said they were currently at a record level; usually they would have 1,000 to 1,500 people, but that number has risen to 2,500.

And he said more laid-off people were expected. “We fear that the layoffs will only intensify after the summer vacations are over, and the companies still don’t have the level of orders that they did before,” Mr. Schwille said.

Employees at MyPegasus said the transfer company was more than just a technical difference from unemployment. “There’s a psychological aspect. A lot of people fall into a hole when they say, ‘I’m unemployed now.’ At a transfer company you don’t feel that way,” said Jochen Bordt, 40, a mechanics instructor. “It does you good not to fall so deep in the hole right away.”

Mr. Marul, who worked for eight years at the auto parts factory before he was laid off, said that it was a boost to have somewhere to go where he saw familiar faces from the shop floor. “For eight years we were making things together; maybe we can do it here,” he said.

Not everyone is optimistic about their chances. Uwe Baier, 31, was laid off in April from a job making oil coolers for trucks at a nearby factory. At MyPegasus he is learning to use computerized machine tools for the first time, which he praised as an important work skill for the future. He did not, however, think it would help him enough in the present economy to find a new job.
“In the next couple months? It’s not good,” Mr. Baier said. “I’d say my chances are bad.”
Victor Homola and Stefan Pauly contributed reporting from Berlin.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Hepatitis Group Is Harassed in China

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31hepatitis.html
July 31, 2009
Hepatitis Group Is Harassed in China
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story] [how a state with population that is onerous deals inhumanely with hepatistis and the like] [*]
BEIJING — In the realm of potential threats to China’s stability, an organization that advocates on behalf of people infected with hepatitis B would seem to be low risk.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31hepatitis.html
July 31, 2009
Hepatitis Group Is Harassed in China
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story] [how a state with population that is onerous deals inhumanely with hepatistis and the like] [*]
BEIJING — In the realm of potential threats to China’s stability, an organization that advocates on behalf of people infected with hepatitis B would seem to be low risk.

But on Wednesday, the group’s director, Lu Jun, found himself squaring off against four security officials who were trying to cart away stacks of literature they claimed had been printed without official permission.

In the end, Mr. Lu scored a partial victory. After eight hours looking through drawers and photographing volunteers, the inspectors walked off with 90 pamphlets, but Mr. Lu prevented them from delving into the group’s computer files. “I fear this is not the end of it,” he said Thursday.

The raid on Mr. Lu’s organization, the Yi Ren Ping Center, comes at a precarious time for China’s nongovernmental organizations, many of which operate in a kind of legal gray zone. Two weeks ago, officials used a bureaucratic infraction as the reason to shut down the country’s pre-eminent legal rights center, Gongmeng, or Open Constitution Initiative. The closing followed a separate disbarment of 53 lawyers known for taking on civil rights and corruption cases. Just before dawn on Wednesday, the founder of Gongmeng, Xu Zhiyong, was taken into police custody, and he has not been heard from since.

“The permissible space in which civil society groups can operate was already small, but right now that circle is getting smaller and smaller,” said Sharon Hom, the executive director of Human Rights in China, which is based in New York. “If an organization is creating an independent voice, putting together a newsletter or organizing people in any way, it’s going to feel the full brunt of the authorities.”

Although it is unclear exactly why the government is tightening its grip on such organizations, legal experts and rights activists generally agree that it may be related to the celebrations, three months from now, of the 60th anniversary of China’s Communist revolution. A similar clampdown took place in the months before the 2008 Summer Olympics, when security officials in Beijing stepped up the harassment of dissidents and encouraged thousands of migrant workers to return to the countryside.

“It’s basically a foolish attempt to make the year as peaceful and uneventful as possible,” said Jiang Tianyong, a lawyer who was among those blocked from renewing their licenses.

Another explanation, Mr. Jiang and others say, is that some powerful segments of China’s leadership feel threatened by the rise of independent entities working to advance causes like labor rights or clean water, or in the case of the Yi Ren Ping Center, protection for people with hepatitis B. [clearly] [*]

There is widespread trepidation over hepatitis B in China, a fear that has been intensified by an explosion in advertising for medical testing services and sham cures. [of which there are billions in China] [*] Even though it is preventable with a vaccine — and most of those infected will not become ill — state-owned companies, medical schools and food-processing plants have come to believe that it is sensible policy to bar the infected.

Under Chinese law, carriers of hepatitis B cannot work as teachers, elevator operators, barbers or supermarket cashiers. [they stigmatize the people who already suffer with silly laws based on superstition not science] [*]In a recent survey of 113 colleges and universities, conducted by the Yi Ren Ping Center, 94 acknowledged that infected applicants, required to take blood tests, would be summarily rejected.

Many of the 120 million carriers in China got the virus in the 1970s and 1980s, when a single contaminated syringe was sometimes used to inoculate hundreds of people at a time against diseases. [thanks, China] [*]The second-biggest group of carriers, about 40 percent of the total, according to the government, got the virus from their mothers during childbirth.

An online bulletin board maintained by Mr. Lu’s group is a heart-rending clearinghouse for stories of people fired from jobs, or students denied college educations, after mandatory blood tests revealed their statuses. There are also scores of tales about the ashamed and the distraught who killed themselves.

“People are so afraid of this virus, they don’t act responsibly,” said Wang Li, an engineer who just graduated from a prestigious Beijing university and saw two job offers evaporate this year when blood tests showed that he had the virus. “The only thing they told me was, ‘You are not suitable for work.’ ”

Founded in 2006 by Mr. Lu, who is also infected, the Yi Ren Ping Center provides up-to-date medical information and tries to arrange legal help for those it considers wrongly dismissed from jobs. It also encourages its 300,000 members to press for antidiscrimination laws. Last summer the center was forced to move its Web site to an overseas server after it mysteriously vanished from the Internet.

Although his organization does not seek to challenge the government’s authority, Mr. Lu recognizes that its mission can stir discomfort among the powerful and mighty. “After all, it is these people who are maintaining the status quo of discrimination,” he said in his office on Thursday. “And of course, according to the government, there is no such thing as discrimination in China. There are only misunderstandings.”
Xiyun Yang contributed research.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

China to Try Suspects Held After Riots

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/01/world/asia/01china.html
August 1, 2009
China to Try Suspects Held After Riots
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story—here it’s that the workers are hysterical, to create something that points dramatically away from state-Party culpability!] [followup] [*]
BEIJING — China will begin trials in the next few weeks for suspects it accuses of playing a role in the deadly riots that shook the capital of Xinjiang region in early July, state media reported on Friday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/01/world/asia/01china.html
August 1, 2009
China to Try Suspects Held After Riots
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story—here it’s that the workers are hysterical, to create something that points dramatically away from state-Party culpability!] [followup] [*]
BEIJING — China will begin trials in the next few weeks for suspects it accuses of playing a role in the deadly riots that shook the capital of Xinjiang region in early July, state media reported on Friday.

The English-language China Daily newspaper said officials were organizing special tribunals to weigh the fate of “a small number” of the 1,400 people who have been detained, most of them Uighurs, a Turkic-speaking Muslim minority whom security forces have blamed for much of the killings.

Earlier this week, the authorities arrested an additional 253 suspects, many through tips provided by residents of Urumqi, the city where the violence took place. On Thursday, the authorities published the photos of another 15 people, all but one of them Uighur, who they say had a hand in the unrest. Those who provide information leading to an arrest can collect as much as $7,350 in reward money.

“The police urge the suspects to turn themselves in,” China Daily wrote, quoting an unidentified law enforcement official. “Those who do so within 10 days will be dealt with leniently while others will be punished severely.”

In the days after the riots, the head of the Communist Party in Xinjiang was blunt about what awaits those convicted of the most serious offenses. “To those who have committed crimes with cruel means, we will execute them,” [thank god they are going to hear everybody out before the Party does anything drastic] [*] said the official, Li Zhi.

The riots, the worst outbreak of ethnic strife in China’s recent history, began July 5 after protests over the deaths of Uighur factory workers in another part of China turned into a murderous rampage. The violence, which lasted three days, claimed 197 lives, most of them Han Chinese beaten to death on the streets, according to the government.

Overseas Uighur advocates, however, insist the official death toll undercounts the number of Uighurs killed both by paramilitary police and during revenge attacks by the Han that followed the initial rioting.

China has accused outsiders of instigating the unrest, heaping most of the blame on Rebiya Kadeer, the 62-year-old leader of the World Uighur Congress, which advocates self-determination for China’s 20 million Uighurs. They say Ms. Kadeer, a businesswoman who spent years in a Chinese jail before going into exile, organized the killings from her home in Washington.

In recent weeks Ms. Kadeer has been on an aggressive campaign to convince the world that her people are the primary victims of the rioting. During a visit to Japan on Wednesday, she told reporters that 10,000 people had disappeared overnight in the days following the unrest. “Where did they go?” she asked. “Were they all killed or sent somewhere? The Chinese government should disclose what happened to them.”

Her claims have infuriated China, with one official in Xinjiang describing her remarks as “completely fabricated.” Ms. Kadeer says she cannot reveal the source of her information because to do so would endanger those who provided it. [*]

This coming week Ms. Kadeer will head to the Melbourne Film Festival in Australia, which is screening “10 Conditions of Love,” a documentary about her life. The directors of several Chinese-language films withdrew their entries in protest of the screening. Chinese diplomats have also been pressing Australia to rescind Ms.. Kadeer’s visa. So far, those efforts have come to naught.

If the trials that followed the 2008 riots in Tibet are any guide, the court hearings in Xinjiang will be swift. According to China Daily, the accused will be appointed lawyers who have “received special training,” as have the judges who will preside over the cases. Each trial will be heard by a panel of three or seven judges, and the majority opinion will prevail.

Human rights groups, however, say they have little confidence the tribunals will be fair. They expect the proceedings to be closed to the public — as are most trials in China — and they note that the defendants will not have lawyers of their own choosing.

“Without independent legal counsel, you don’t have any clue as to what evidence has been collected and through what means,” said Renee Xia, international director of Chinese Human Rights Defenders, which is based in Hong Kong. “Were they tortured or coerced to confess? Trials can be speedy, but it doesn’t mean they will be fair.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Fishermen Scoop Up Sri Lanka’s Peace Dividend

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31lanka.html
July 31, 2009
Trincomalee Journal
Fishermen Scoop Up Sri Lanka’s Peace Dividend
By LYDIA POLGREEN [Sri Lanka] [south asia] [ongoing war between Tamil Tigers and Sinhalese govt—past 30 years or so] [media declared it over and Pajpaksa and his brother as victors, though I suppose it’s hard to see anyone as particularly victorious in this debacle of so many years] [followup] [good news for a change: now that the war is mostly over fishing is again possible and protein-food is plentiful] [*]
TRINCOMALEE, Sri Lanka — It was just after dawn and the fish market beneath this port city’s clock tower was humming. Fishermen shouldering baskets laden with the

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31lanka.html
July 31, 2009
Trincomalee Journal
Fishermen Scoop Up Sri Lanka’s Peace Dividend
By LYDIA POLGREEN [Sri Lanka] [south asia] [ongoing war between Tamil Tigers and Sinhalese govt—past 30 years or so] [media declared it over and Pajpaksa and his brother as victors, though I suppose it’s hard to see anyone as particularly victorious in this debacle of so many years] [followup] [good news for a change: now that the war is mostly over fishing is again possible and protein-food is plentiful] [*]
TRINCOMALEE, Sri Lanka — It was just after dawn and the fish market beneath this port city’s clock tower was humming. Fishermen shouldering baskets laden with the night’s catch tipped their Spanish mackerel, tuna and prawns onto the slick concrete floor for buyers. Sweaty men with clipboards and wads of cash leaned in close to inspect with crinkled noses, squinting eyes and prodding fingers.

“I’ll take this for 500 rupees a kilo,” nearly $5, one buyer said to an expectant fisherman, waving his chin in the direction of a large, glistening yellowfin tuna. “Can you get me more?”

Fishermen here certainly hope so. The end of the brutal 26-year war against the Tamil Tiger insurgency in Sri Lanka prompted the government to ease fishing restrictions on Trincomalee’s harbor, breathing new life into the region’s moribund fishing industry. Boats once moldering on shore now go on all-night runs for tuna, squid and lobster. Ghostly markets are coming back to life.

Trincomalee has one of the world’s deepest natural harbors, and its potential for fishing, shipping and tourism seems endless. It holds a bounty of fish, crab and prawns that could provide tens of millions of dollars in earnings. Whales spawn here and dolphins leap in the azure waters.

But the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, one of the world’s most brutal and enduring separatist groups, had a small but effective navy it used in suicide missions and to supply weapons to its fighters. Although the rebels were chased from this region in 2006, the bay has been largely off limits to development because of security concerns.

In the past month, the government has allowed fishermen to fish in 12-hour shifts here and has allowed fishing to resume in other previously restricted coastal areas.

Fishing is at the heart of the economic and cultural life of this region, indeed of much of coastal Sri Lanka, and its return is being celebrated in the north and east.

“When people here cannot fish they feel as if they are not living,” said T. T. R. de Silva, the top central government official here.

The rapid rebound of the fishing industry here mirrors a broader rebirth under way, one that gives people in Sri Lanka a tantalizing morsel of how prosperous postwar life could be.

In Sri Lanka, with its lush tea plantations, miles of pristine beaches, rolling farmland and deep water harbors, the economy is waiting to be unleashed, government officials and business leaders say. Nowhere is that truer than in the war-scarred east and north of the country.

In 1981 the Eastern Province accounted for 11 percent of the country’s gross domestic product. In 2006 it contributed only 4 percent, said Palitha T. B. Kohona, Sri Lanka’s foreign secretary, who has been trying to drum up investment in the formerly war-torn parts of the country.

“The potential here is just enormous,” he said. “There is nowhere to go but up.”

Sri Lanka’s economy has grown at a relatively good clip despite nearly three decades of war, averaging about 6 percent annually in the past four years.

But winning the war, which required an army of about 200,000 men and huge expenditures on arms, has left the government’s coffers almost empty. After weeks of wrangling, the International Monetary Fund has agreed to help Sri Lanka with a $2.6 billion line of credit, despite objections from some Western countries concerned about the government’s human rights record.

In the last weeks of the war thousands of Tamil civilians died in a narrow strip of land where they were stuck, along with Tamil Tiger fighters. The government says it did not intentionally attack civilians, but human rights organizations have called for an independent investigation. The government has vehemently opposed such an inquiry.

Here in Trincomalee, hopes for a large peace dividend are high.

“The war is over,” said D. H. Podimahathaya, a 43-year-old fisherman who has seen his income plummet because of restrictions on fishing in Trincomalee harbor. “Everyone suffered a lot. Now we need money.”

Mr. Podimahathaya’s family has been fishing for generations, and the restrictions hit them hard.

“Our whole family depends on fishing,” he said. “At some times we didn’t have anything to eat. But now the situation is improving.”

Muthumala Gunadasa, a wizened 57-year-old fisherman, said the war had forced three of his brothers to migrate to the south, despite the fact that the fishing here is much more lucrative.

“But now those who left are returning home,” he said. “Everyone wants to fish here.”

But the picture in Trincomalee is not exactly postcard perfect, said R. Rajarammohan, chairman of the city’s Chamber of Commerce. The seas may be more open, but strict security measures remain on land, like the roadblocks leading from the city to the capital, Colombo, where much of Trincomalee’s daily catch is headed.

“When goods and people cannot move freely, it is premature to talk about an economic turnaround,” Mr. Rajarammohan said. “If the war is over, are all of these measures really necessary?”

Indeed, the journey from Trincomalee to Colombo, just 160 miles, can take more than eight hours. Soldiers stop motorists more than a dozen times, and at one major checkpoint passengers must get out of their vehicles and have their cargo searched.

Government officials say that these precautions are necessary because Tamil rebels may remain hidden in the north and east. The rebels have used women and children as suicide bombers in the past, so almost anyone could be a suspect, Mr. de Silva said.

“We cannot be too careful,” he said. “The war only just ended.”

Fishermen here are glad to be back out on the water, but they say they are looking forward to the day when they can fish anytime they like. At the moment they can go out for only 12 hours at a time, and they can use only small outboard motors, which limits the size of their catch.
“There is so much demand, but we can’t meet it,” said a 62-year-old fisherman named Siripala. “One day, we hope to be free to fish without fear.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Trials Strengthen Mugabe’s Hand

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31zimbabwe.html
July 31, 2009
Trials Strengthen Mugabe’s Hand
By ALAN COWELL [Africa] [Zimbabwe] [south-central] [south of horn; landlocked] [Zimbabwe] [south-central Africa, east coast] [former Rhodesia] [white rule and apartheid during colonial days] [since 1970s or so, momentum for majority rule, not unlike neighboring South Africa] [followup] [*]
In a curious case blending the disappearance of a cellphone with allegations of political maneuvering, an official from Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change was set to appear in court to face accusations that could further strain the country’s frail coalition

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31zimbabwe.html
July 31, 2009
Trials Strengthen Mugabe’s Hand
By ALAN COWELL [Africa] [Zimbabwe] [south-central] [south of horn; landlocked] [Zimbabwe] [south-central Africa, east coast] [former Rhodesia] [white rule and apartheid during colonial days] [since 1970s or so, momentum for majority rule, not unlike neighboring South Africa] [followup] [*]
In a curious case blending the disappearance of a cellphone with allegations of political maneuvering, an official from Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change was set to appear in court to face accusations that could further strain the country’s frail coalition government, according to The Herald, a state-run newspaper, on Thursday.

The official, Thamsanqa Mahlangu, the deputy youth minister, was arrested this week, accused of stealing a cellphone from an ally of President Robert Mugabe while sharing a lunch table with him at a political unity event. The accusation relates to a purely criminal charge, but it also seems likely to revive accusations by Mr. Mugabe’s adversaries that he is seeking to reassert his absolute grasp on power, [incredible] [anybody who gives Mugabe so much as a sliver of an advantage should be flogged] [*] using criminal cases against lawmakers to deplete the ranks of his opponents in Parliament.

Last February, Mr. Mugabe and Morgan Tsvangirai, the leader of the Movement for Democratic Change, formed a so-called unity government in the face of a protracted and profound postelection crisis. Since then, five lawmakers from Mr. Tsvangirai’s party have been convicted of a variety of charges, forcing them to leave Parliament and threatening the party’s slender majority. If Mr. Tsvangirai’s followers lose their majority, Mr. Mugabe’s party would have the power to pass or block legislation without seeking the agreement of its supposed coalition partner.

According to The Herald on Thursday, Mr. Mahlangu was accused of stealing a cellphone belonging to Joseph Chinotimba, a leader of the so-called war veterans who fought on Mr. Mugabe’s side in the guerrilla war that led to independence and later led a campaign to drive white farmers off the country’s most productive farms.

The Herald said Mr. Mahlangu would appear in court on Thursday, but there was no immediate confirmation when the case would be heard.

The two men were said to have been sharing a table in a hotel V.I.P. lounge during an event called National Vision 2040 on July 17. Mr. Chinotimba “allegedly left his Nokia 2310 with a Net One line on the table as he went to collect his food,” The Herald reported. Two other people, Geraldine Alvina Phiri, 21, and Patience Nyoni, 27, were also implicated in the alleged theft and appeared in court on Wednesday.

Mr. Tsvangirai’s party emerged as the strongest in parliamentary elections in March 2008 and claimed also to have won the presidential vote. But Mr. Mugabe insisted on a runoff in June, even as he was left as the only candidate when Mr. Tsvangirai withdrew, citing widespread political violence widely ascribed to Mr. Mugabe’s followers.

Since the formation of the power-sharing government, Zimbabweans say there has been some easing in their economic plight, with inflation cut to 6 percent from almost incalculable levels and pay raises for government employees.

Additionally, the government seems to have eased some of its draconian restrictions on journalists. It permitted a BBC reporter to work openly in the country. The Information Ministry said it was also talking with CNN about resuming reporting, The Associated Press reported. And the government issued an operating license to a local newspaper group, Associated Newspapers of Zimbabwe, forced to close down by the state five years ago, Reuters reported.

There are also signs of some political progress. Mr. Tsvangirai held a long-delayed first meeting of the unity government’s national security council on Thursday, sitting down with top generals, the vice president and several ministers, according to Reuters.

At the same time, there are persistent reports of a resurgence of violence against Mr. Tsvangirai’s followers. Reuters quoted witnesses as saying gangs of young people loyal to Mr. Mugabe had begun harassing and beating Mr. Tsvangirai’s supporters ahead of by-elections to choose replacements for the imprisoned lawmakers.

In the elections last year, Mr. Tsvangirai’s party won 100 seats in the 210-member lower House of Assembly, supported by a smaller faction of the party with 10 seats. Mr. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party — the dominant force in Zimbabwean politics since independence from Britain in 1980 — won 99 seats. The jailing of lawmakers, who must quit Parliament if sentenced to more than six months in prison, has whittled Mr. Tsvangirai’s majority.

Apart from cases already heard or before the courts, 16 other Tsvangirai supporters face charges that they deny. They include the finance minister, Tendai Biti, who faces treason charges. None of Mr. Mugabe’s supporters, accused by human rights groups of waging a campaign of terror during last year’s election season, have been prosecuted.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Nigeria Confirms Death of Islamic Sect’s Leader

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31nigeria.html
July 31, 2009
Nigeria Confirms Death of Islamic Sect’s Leader
By ADAM NOSSITER [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [I scarcely remember Islamic cults as significant “insurgency” factor in Nigeria the past several years?] [I’m having some difficulty getting my mind around what this represents in the larger scheme?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Nigerian security forces on Thursday confirmed the death of the leader of a fundamentalist Islamic sect in the city of Maiduguri, apparently ending a fierce five-day campaign against the group that may have left hundreds dead across northern Nigeria.

A military spokesman would not say exactly how the leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was killed, though news agencies widely reported that he was killed after being captured. [don’t be shocked if he was brutally tortured] [*] Human Rights Watch quickly issued a statement saying that “the killing in police custody of criminal suspects has become an extremely worrying pattern in Nigeria.”

The group’s compound — a mosque, a clinic and living quarters — was flattened after an all-out military assault on Wednesday that left bodies scattered about the area, reports and photographs from the scene suggested. [*]

“Everything has been destroyed,” said Isa Umar Gusau, a reporter for The Daily Trust, a Nigerian newspaper, in a phone interview on Thursday from Maiduguri. He said he had seen about 50 bodies in the compound.

Nigeria, a fractious confederation of hundreds of linguistic and ethnic groups, is regularly riven by bloody religious strife. But this latest episode of violence has surprised even experienced observers, because of the intensity of the military response. [*]Human rights groups expressed concern over civilian casualties — the exact number is not known — in an armed operation in a densely populated area, within a crowded metropolis. These rights groups often accuse the military of heavy-handedness in dealing with civil unrest.

Authorities blamed the religious sect, known as Boko Haram, [*]for attacks on police stations on Sunday and Monday, and for amassing bombs, shells and fighters in preparation for a religion-inspired war on the state. The group’s name is a Hausa expression connoting distaste for Western education.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31nigeria.html
July 31, 2009
Nigeria Confirms Death of Islamic Sect’s Leader
By ADAM NOSSITER [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [I scarcely remember Islamic cults as significant “insurgency” factor in Nigeria the past several years?] [I’m having some difficulty getting my mind around what this represents in the larger scheme?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Nigerian security forces on Thursday confirmed the death of the leader of a fundamentalist Islamic sect in the city of Maiduguri, apparently ending a fierce five-day campaign against the group that may have left hundreds dead across northern Nigeria.

A military spokesman would not say exactly how the leader, Mohammed Yusuf, was killed, though news agencies widely reported that he was killed after being captured. [don’t be shocked if he was brutally tortured] [*] Human Rights Watch quickly issued a statement saying that “the killing in police custody of criminal suspects has become an extremely worrying pattern in Nigeria.”

The group’s compound — a mosque, a clinic and living quarters — was flattened after an all-out military assault on Wednesday that left bodies scattered about the area, reports and photographs from the scene suggested. [*]

“Everything has been destroyed,” said Isa Umar Gusau, a reporter for The Daily Trust, a Nigerian newspaper, in a phone interview on Thursday from Maiduguri. He said he had seen about 50 bodies in the compound.

Nigeria, a fractious confederation of hundreds of linguistic and ethnic groups, is regularly riven by bloody religious strife. But this latest episode of violence has surprised even experienced observers, because of the intensity of the military response. [*]Human rights groups expressed concern over civilian casualties — the exact number is not known — in an armed operation in a densely populated area, within a crowded metropolis. These rights groups often accuse the military of heavy-handedness in dealing with civil unrest.

Authorities blamed the religious sect, known as Boko Haram, [*]for attacks on police stations on Sunday and Monday, and for amassing bombs, shells and fighters in preparation for a religion-inspired war on the state. The group’s name is a Hausa expression connoting distaste for Western education.

The authorities responded fiercely: the army quickly took over from the police, and sect buildings were strafed with gunfire and shells. In Maiduguri, a city of more than a million, frightened residents stayed indoors. Several thousand people were displaced from their homes. Estimates of the dead from reporters and observers are in the hundreds, though authorities have refused to give a death toll.

“Maiduguri town is free,” said the military spokesman, Col. Mohammed Yerima, in a phone interview from Abuja.

“It’s just the pockets of fundamentalists that we are mopping out,” he said. “We have dislodged the fundamentalists out of Maiduguri, and they have withdrawn to the outskirts.”

Colonel Yerima rebutted assertions from critics that the operation had been heavy-handed, saying loss of life had been kept “to the barest minimum.”

But questions lingered even as the operation drew to a close.

“Once you call in the army, the response is always the same,” said Jibrin Ibrahim, director of the Center for Democracy and Development in Abuja, a leading West African research group. “You show them the area, and they bulldoze the area. That’s what they’ve always done in situations like this.”

A leading Nigerian human rights official, Shimaki Gad Peter of the League for Human Rights, said that during the operation, it would have been “difficult to differentiate between sect members and non-sect members because they are not carrying uniforms.”

Colonel Yerima alluded indirectly to the difficulty of distinguishing between innocent civilians and sect members. “We announced to the civilians that they should leave that place,” [yes, well the US used to drop leavlets on villages in Vietnam before turning the area into free-fire zones] [people often were too scared to move, they would not even pick up the leaflets for fear of involvement, and other odd things] [*] he said.

“Anybody found in that area is a member of that organization,” he continued, adding: “That is what we suppose because we give notice for people to get out of that place. The fundamentalists use people as a shield.”

With the gunfire over on Thursday, a semblance of calm returned to the battered city. The police and the military kept tight control on movement in the streets.

“Lots of stop and search by police, to make sure the dissidents don’t get back in the city,” said Mr. Gusau, the Daily Trust reporter, by phone from Maiduguri. “They are searching every road in the city, searching individuals, stopping people who have maybe changed their identities.”

The area of military operations “is completely destroyed,” Mr. Gusau reiterated.

Descriptions like that gave pause to human rights officials who were unable to survey the damage firsthand. “My feeling is that there was an excess use of force,” Mr. Peter said. “I thought this was supposed to be a police action. This is like warfare.”
Adam Nossiter reported from Dakar, and Alan Cowell from Paris.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Settlement Foes Take Fight to Israel's High Court

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003809.html
Settlement Foes Take Fight to Israel's High Court
By Howard Schneider
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Palestine] [West Bank] [Fatahstine] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [the Migron settlement controversy that’s built now for a decade?] [example of what Goldblog correctly calls Israel settlement addiction] [*]
BURQA, West Bank -- It has been nearly a decade since the Jewish settlement of Migron appeared on the hilltop opposite this Palestinian village, beginning with a

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003809.html
Settlement Foes Take Fight to Israel's High Court
By Howard Schneider
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Palestine] [West Bank] [Fatahstine] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [the Migron settlement controversy that’s built now for a decade?] [example of what Goldblog correctly calls Israel settlement addiction] [*]
BURQA, West Bank -- It has been nearly a decade since the Jewish settlement of Migron appeared on the hilltop opposite this Palestinian village, beginning with a communications tower and followed by a cluster of homes and a fence around approximately 90 acres of land.

Data tucked onto the hard drive of anti-settlement activist Dror Etkes's computer indicates that the land belongs to the residents of Burqa and nearby Deir Dibwan, and Etkes said he expects that information will one day force the settlers to leave.

The compulsion won't come from Israel's politicians, world public opinion or the Obama administration, Etkes contends, but from Israel's Supreme Court, where local advocacy groups are having increased success challenging settlements with simple property claims.

Etkes, the 42-year-old coordinator of settlement issues for the Israeli human rights group Yesh Din, has helped instigate a number of lawsuits through the pioneering use of mapping software to establish where settlements have encroached on private Palestinian land. "You have to create a tsunami that will expose the dimensions" of the problem, [*]he said.

The debate over the status of West Bank settlements has been underway for more than three decades -- with the United States and many other countries regarding them as the improper actions of an occupying power, Israel claiming they are legitimate uses of land it is responsible for administering, and the Palestinians regarding them as an effort to undermine creation of a state of their own. [and both are more or less right?] [*] Israel captured the West Bank in the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, and about 290,000 Israelis now live in roughly 120 government-sanctioned settlements, as well as several dozen unauthorized ones. Those figures exclude Jewish areas in East Jerusalem.

The enclaves run from small clusters of homes, such as Migron, where some residents feel they are fulfilling a religious call to reclaim the land of Israel, to city-size developments with tens of thousands of residents drawn by cheaper prices and room for growing families. [leave faith-based knowledge (that is, those things whose epistomolgy is purely faith) out of world politics] [*]

But even as the international debate has proceeded with no clear resolution -- the dispute between President Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is the latest in a long series of disagreements between their countries over the issue -- a quiet revolution has taken place among Israeli groups opposed to the settlements.

Limited in the past to political advocacy and efforts to court international opinion, they now have access to a deeply layered database on West Bank land that Etkes assembled over three years. Multiple sets of information can be compared -- official Israeli maps; Palestinian, Jordanian and British records rendered in digital form; hundreds of Global Positioning System images; and aerial photos supplemented by field observations.

The Israeli courts honor the property rights of Palestinians and are beginning to pressure the government to block construction or make plans to remove houses built on private property. Proving landownership in the West Bank is not always easy, though, with a hodgepodge of records and rules that include formal land registrations, conventions that extend property rights to those who traditionally cultivate an area and Israeli government property seizures.

Still, Etkes's data are having an effect. Prodded by litigation, the Israeli government is laying plans now to move the Migron settlers to another part of the West Bank. And building at the settlement of Ofra has been restricted because it is on private land, according to Michael Sfard, the lawyer who has filed most of the lawsuits.

"It's a different universe," Sfard said. "If we had had these tools 40 years ago, I think the landscape would be different." Yesh Din has about 20 cases pending in the courts, and Etkes said "dozens" more are yet to be filed. The change has been noted by the Netanyahu government and others, who say the groups are funded by foreign governments and other outside sources and who have promised more aggressive rebuttals.

But Yesh Din's strategy of relying on the Israeli courts raises some deeper issues, akin to the debates in the United States about the role of the judiciary in molding policy, said Gerald Steinberg of Bar-Ilan University, who tracks the funding and relationships among nongovernmental groups.

"There is already a debate that the court is run by a small group of like-minded people that are outside the political process," Steinberg said. "As a result of this, it will increase." Judges are chosen by a nine-member committee that includes three justices, members of the Israeli bar, cabinet members and members of the parliament.

That debate, Etkes said, is the type of issue he hopes his work will raise. There is little chance, he added, that litigation alone will stop the expansion of settlements. But he said he hopes it will make Israelis confront the degree to which the settlements have encroached on private property and make the government enforce the law.

"We're asking questions about what Israel wants to be when it grows up," said Etkes, a former tour guide who said that he was raised in a religious family that supported the settlements and that he spent summers picking fruit in some of the same communities he is now opposing in court. "You talk about the rule of law and say that is your ethos. The main point is: Who controls the West Bank -- the state or the settlers?" [I don’t know how people cannot love Israel] [it’s incredible] [it’s brutally honest about itself in a neighborhood where such honesty score you zero points for the sake of honesty] [and Israelis are Israel most penetrating critics by far] [in short, the things that make a democracy so powerful a sytem of governance in a region where democracy is disincentivized in perpetuity] [*]

Enforcement of the rules can be slow, with Israeli authorities saying they prefer even years-long negotiations to risking the kind of violence that flared this month when settlers set fire to Palestinian fields and pelted cars with rocks after the removal of a small outpost.

Across the valley in Migron, training-wheel bikes scattered in driveways speak to a community that is nestled and comfortable, despite the large metal security gate and the guard at the entrance.

Itai Harel was one of the first to move to Migron. He said there was no sense of taking land that belonged to anyone else, only of improving barren hills "where our prophets walked and where the Bible was written." In responding to the litigation, Migron residents contended that their homes were built on land that had been abandoned and was under Israeli state control, and that they were abiding by government policy that supported Jewish settlement in the area.

If the larger area that was fenced in around Migron included private fields -- Harel acknowledged that some wheat and barley fields had been maintained in the area -- then compensation should be discussed, he said.

According to Etkes, all of Migron is in a part of the West Bank where private land registration was completed before the 1967 war and ownership was well established. He has become a familiar figure to the settlers, trolling the West Bank in a dusty four-wheel-drive vehicle looking for signs of new roads or outposts. [*]

"They found a genius strategy: go to the Supreme Court, where everybody thinks like them," Harel said of Etkes and groups such as Yesh Din and Peace Now.

"Why should we leave here? If we leave, it is acknowledging it is occupied land," rather than Israel, said Harel, 35, who is raising four children here.

Across the valley, Mohammed Barakat, the Palestinian village treasurer of Burqa, said the wheat and barley fields mentioned by Harel may well have been his: Those were the crops grown on his 10 acres before the fence went up around the place in 2001. The loss has meant a few thousand dollars a year out of his pocket ever since. [*]
"It's paralyzing," Barakat said of the settlements and the road, built for their use, that encircle Burqa. "It's like living in a refugee camp."
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Israel: Report on Gaza War

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31briefs-Israelbrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Israel: Report on Gaza War
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Israel] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [Israel embroiled in its own internal dynamics where the US is resented among many while lauded among others] [yet another report (?) on the December Gaza war (I watched it in hospital)] [psci355] [*]
An Israeli government report released Thursday insisted that “incessant” Hamas rocket attacks forced Israel to attack Gaza in late 2008 and early 2009, countering charges of war crimes but acknowledging that more than a dozen criminal inquiries [*]are under

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31briefs-Israelbrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Israel: Report on Gaza War
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Israel] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [Israel embroiled in its own internal dynamics where the US is resented among many while lauded among others] [yet another report (?) on the December Gaza war (I watched it in hospital)] [psci355] [*]
An Israeli government report released Thursday insisted that “incessant” Hamas rocket attacks forced Israel to attack Gaza in late 2008 and early 2009, countering charges of war crimes but acknowledging that more than a dozen criminal inquiries [*]are under way. The 160-page report was the first comprehensive Israeli government study of the offensive in December and January. It was an attempt to answer charges from Palestinians, the United Nations, and human rights groups that Israeli forces committed war crimes [phosphorous, shooting noncombatants in cold blood, desecrating religious sites, etc] [*] and violated international law during the three-week operation. The Israeli government said the report was not meant to be an “assertion of infallibility,” but rejected the charges one by one, attributing extensive damage and casualties to wartime mistakes.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Syria: Human Rights Lawyer Held

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31briefs-Syriabrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Syria: Human Rights Lawyer Held
By REUTERS [Syria] [middle east proper] [Bashir regime] [Syria’s increasing interest in dealing with US-West and possibly cutting deal with Israel for Golan] [followup] [Syria’s pretty miserable record on human rights] [*]
Syrian authorities arrested a leading human rights lawyer, his colleagues said Thursday. The lawyer, Mohannad al-Hussani, who has been handling high-profile political cases,

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31briefs-Syriabrf.html
July 31, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Syria: Human Rights Lawyer Held
By REUTERS [Syria] [middle east proper] [Bashir regime] [Syria’s increasing interest in dealing with US-West and possibly cutting deal with Israel for Golan] [followup] [Syria’s pretty miserable record on human rights] [*]
Syrian authorities arrested a leading human rights lawyer, his colleagues said Thursday. The lawyer, Mohannad al-Hussani, who has been handling high-profile political cases, was summoned Tuesday to State Security, one of many intelligence agencies in Syria. [which is serious in Syria] [*] Mr. Hussani has not been heard from since then and no charges have been lodged against him, [*]his colleagues said. There was no comment from the Syrian authorities. Arbitrary arrests in Syria are common, international human rights organization say, and it is common for detainees to remain in jail for months before facing any charges. [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Britain Initiates Iraq War Inquiry

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003810.html
Britain Initiates Iraq War Inquiry
Ex-Prime Minister Blair Is Set to Testify
By Karla Adam
Special to the Washington Post
Friday, July 31, 2009 [UK] [London] [House of Commons] [investigation into the rush to war in –ir.!] [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
LONDON, July 30 – Britain launched an independent inquiry into its role in the Iraq war, with the panel’s chairman confirming that former prime minister Tony Blair will be among the witnesses and that it would not “shy away from making criticism.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003810.html
Britain Initiates Iraq War Inquiry
Ex-Prime Minister Blair Is Set to Testify
By Karla Adam
Special to the Washington Post
Friday, July 31, 2009 [UK] [London] [House of Commons] [investigation into the rush to war in –ir.!] [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
LONDON, July 30 – Britain launched an independent inquiry into its role in the Iraq war, with the panel’s chairman confirming that former prime minister Tony Blair will be among the witnesses and that it would not “shy away from making criticism.”

John Chilcot said at a news conference Thursday that the panel would scrutinize the period from 2001 until the present, making its investigation Britain’s widest-ranging inquiry yet into the Iraq war.

He also said that “the Anglo-American relationship is one of the most central parts of this inquiry” and that the panel hoped to have “discussions” with Americans involved in the war. At the same time, he said, “discussions and evidence sessions are not necessarily the same thing, and of course we have no power to compel witnesses here, let alone in foreign governments.” [*]

Blair's decision to join the 2003 U.S.-led invasion was deeply unpopular here and was seen as one of the key reasons he stepped down two years ago.

Chilcot, a former civil servant, emphasized that "the inquiry is not a court" and that nobody is on trial, but he said, "I want to make something absolutely clear: The committee will not shy away from making criticism."

"If we find that mistakes were made, that there were issues which could have been dealt with better, we will say so frankly," he said.

When Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced the inquiry last month, he initially said it would be held behind closed doors. The decision was reversed after objections from opposition politicians and families of British soldiers who died in Iraq. The war has claimed the lives of 179 British troops, and Brown has described the inquiry as a chance to pinpoint "lessons learned."

Chilcot said that "wherever possible," the inquiry will be conducted in public -- perhaps broadcast on television or streamed live on the Internet, he said -- although some sessions will be held in private as a matter of national security and to "ensure complete candor and openness" from witnesses. [oh lovely for us] [this should be worth recording ane editing into 30-60 minute parts on substantive divisions from USFP standpoint] [*]

Britain has held two other major inquiries concerning its involvement in the Iraq war, including one into the suicide of David Kelly, a weapons specialist who was critical of the Blair government's intelligence on Iraqi weapons. The inquiries, held in 2004, largely cleared the government but were accused by some of leaving key questions unanswered and of being insufficiently independent.

In addition to Chilcot, the committee members are Lawrence Freedman, a professor of war studies at King's College in London; Martin Gilbert, a military historian and biographer of Winston Churchill; Roderick Lyne, a former British ambassador to Russia; and Usha Prashar, chairman of a commission that selects candidates for judicial office in England and Wales.

Findings will not be published until late 2010 at the earliest, Chilcot said, adding that it was "quite simply a huge job." Critics have noted that this means the final report, which could be damaging to Brown's Labor Party, will be issued after Britain's next national elections, which must be held by June. [*]

Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, said the inquiry must have "teeth."

"The Government must not be able to interfere to keep Blair and Brown out of the spotlight for the sake of political convenience in the run-up to an election," Clegg said in a statement on his Web site. "Tony Blair ordered this disastrous war and Gordon Brown signed the cheques -- without public appearances from them, this inquiry will be seen as a whitewash." [*] [while I do believe Blair would take some of his decisions back now, I also think he’s a decent fellow; I also think that more or less of President Bush] [both, imhv, made some terrible mistakes but mostly for what they thought were sound reasons after 9/11 and much of that is understandable at least initially] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Bombs Outside Mosques in Baghdad Kill at Least 29

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/01/world/middleeast/01iraq.html
August 1, 2009
Bombs Outside Mosques in Baghdad Kill at Least 29
By SAM DAGHER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [another series of apparently sectarian flareups] note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
BAGHDAD — Bombs exploded near five Shiite mosques around Baghdad within 45 minutes on Friday as worshipers attended prayer services, killing at least 29 people in what appeared to be a coordinated attack against followers of the anti-American cleric Moktada al-Sadr, Iraqi officials and a Sadr aide said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/01/world/middleeast/01iraq.html
August 1, 2009
Bombs Outside Mosques in Baghdad Kill at Least 29
By SAM DAGHER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [another series of apparently sectarian flareups] note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
BAGHDAD — Bombs exploded near five Shiite mosques around Baghdad within 45 minutes on Friday as worshipers attended prayer services, killing at least 29 people in what appeared to be a coordinated attack against followers of the anti-American cleric Moktada al-Sadr, Iraqi officials and a Sadr aide said.

The bombs, which the police said were hidden just outside the mosques, tore through the Friday calm in five predominantly Shiite working-class neighborhoods, three of them on the east side of the city, one in the south and one in the north.

A total of 136 people were reported wounded in the attacks, all of which took place between 12:45 p.m. and 1:30 p.m., according an official from the Interior Ministry who spoke under customary condition of anonymity.

Officials said that highest death toll was outside the Shuroofi mosque in the north, in the district of Shaab. Once controlled by a militia loyal to Mr. Sadr, the mosque had in recent years been taken over by the national police, so Sadr loyalists pray outside in the street. Initial reports indicated that 23 people died in the attack and 107 were wounded.

Shortly after the bombing, prayer mats, beads, shoes and umbrellas used for shade from the midday sun were scattered along the street. Women wailed. Witnesses said the explosion had been caused by a bomb hidden in a parked car on a road where several hundred people had gathered to pray.

“It is a horrific scene,” said Ali Riyadh, 18, who had been attending the prayers and was wearing a white robe stained with blood from people he had helped rescue. “People lost their limbs, and some had their faces blown off. I haven’t seen anything like this.”

The street, witnesses said, had been closed to traffic, and only residents of the area were permitted to park there. The National Police closed the mosque because they suspected the Sadr militia of using as a base for anti-government operations, the witnesses said.

Some of the worshipers expressed bitter anger that the national security forces had been unable to protect them and said that they believed the Sadr militia, which has largely been disbanded in recent years as the Sadrists emphasized their identity as a political and social movement, should be allowed once again to patrol.

Tariq al-Kenani, an official from the political movement loyal to Mr. Sadr, confirmed Friday afternoon that at least four of the mosques struck were connected with the movement. In a measure of the Sadrists’ anger, he accused Iraqi security forces of complicity in the attacks.

“There’s an organized campaign to liquidate Sadrists in which security forces are involved,” he said.

The second most deadly bombing Friday took place at Al Rasool Mosque in the Diyala Bridge neighborhood of east Baghdad. Five people died when two bombs exploded in quick succession there, and 15 were wounded.

While there have been numerous attacks on Shiite pilgrims in Baghdad and in predominantly Shiite marketplaces, attacks on the city’s mosques have been infrequent in recent months.

On the outskirts of the volatile northern city of Kirkuk, however, 68 people died last month when a truck packed with explosives detonated outside a mosque just after Friday Prayers. Nearly 200 others were injured.

Although violence has declined significantly since the worst of Iraq’s sectarian conflict in 2006 and 2007, attacks continue almost daily against Iraqi forces, and an intermittent pattern of major attacks continues to wreak havoc, often aimed at civilians in markets and other public places.

Many of the attacks appear intended to stoke sectarian tensions or settle political scores, and all have raised concerns — and, increasingly, anger — that Iraq’s security forces are not providing sufficient security as American troops provide less support and remain outside of urban areas under the terms of the current security agreement.
Timothy Williams contributed reporting from Baghdad and Sharon Otterman from New York.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Explosions in Iraqi Political Office Kill at Least 5

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31iraq.html
July 31, 2009
Explosions in Iraqi Political Office Kill at Least 5
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS and ABEER MOHAMMED [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [another series of apparently sectarian flareups] note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
BAGHDAD — At least 5 people were killed and 14 others wounded on Thursday when a pair of explosions ripped through the offices of a Sunni political party in Diyala Province while the party’s leaders met, the Iraqi police said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31iraq.html
July 31, 2009
Explosions in Iraqi Political Office Kill at Least 5
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS and ABEER MOHAMMED [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [another series of apparently sectarian flareups] note: yesterday’s report on important colonel who says it’s time for the US to begin heading home!] [*]
BAGHDAD — At least 5 people were killed and 14 others wounded on Thursday when a pair of explosions ripped through the offices of a Sunni political party in Diyala Province while the party’s leaders met, the Iraqi police said.

It was the second time this year that the building housing the party, the Reform and Development Party, was bombed, the authorities said, even though the party is a relatively minor political force.

In January, a car bomb detonated outside the building, which is in Baquba, Diyala’s provincial capital. Seven people were wounded in the attack.

Iraqi and American officials have warned that political violence will probably increase with the approach of parliamentary elections scheduled for next January, as competing groups jockey for position and power.

This month, a pair of bombs outside the headquarters of the Iraqi Islamic Party in the western city of Falluja killed 5 people and wounded 21. The Iraqi Islamic Party is the country’s main Sunni political party. [*]

Thursday was also when Iraqis were supposed to vote on the Iraqi-American security agreement, including the timing of the departure of United States troops. When the Iraqi Parliament approved the security plan last year, one of the terms was that a national referendum be held by July 30, 2009.

The referendum plan had been a way to appease Iraqi political groups wary of approving an agreement that allowed American troops to remain in Iraq until 2012.

But with the phased withdrawal of American troops from Iraq, including the departure of combat forces from cities last month, much of the suspicion among the Iraqi public that the Americans sought to stay indefinitely has been cast away, lessening the urgency for a referendum on the issue, Iraqi lawmakers said Thursday.

Had a national referendum failed, American forces would have had to leave Iraq entirely within one year of the vote.

The government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki has proposed scheduling the referendum for Jan. 15 to coincide with parliamentary elections.

On Thursday, one of the few public mentions of the July 30 deadline was made by Tariq al-Hashemi, one of Iraq’s two vice presidents.

“This date had been carefully chosen to provide the necessary time to have a tangible result,” Mr. Hashemi said in a statement. “Failure to meet the date is a delay that denies the Iraqi people their rights.”

In the meantime, various Iraqi governmental entities pointed fingers at one another for failing to convene an election.

Some members of Parliament blamed the Maliki government for the delay of the vote, saying it wanted to avoid an embarrassing election defeat; the head of Iraq’s elections commission blamed Parliament for failing to approve an election law; and an adviser to Mr. Maliki blamed the elections commission and Parliament. [*]

“It is an issue between Parliament and the Independent High Electoral Commission,” said Ali al-Mousawi, Mr. Maliki’s media adviser. “The government submitted a suggestion to Parliament to hold the election on the same date as the parliamentary election. So why didn’t Parliament refuse that suggestion and hold it on July 30? The government only carries out what the Parliament asks it to.”

The United States military in Iraq had no immediate comment.

Also Thursday, 5 people were killed and 10 wounded when a truck bomb exploded near a police station in Anbar Province, not far from the Syrian border, the Iraqi police said.

In Mosul, two Iraqi soldiers were killed when gunmen opened fire at a security checkpoint, the authorities said.
Mohammed Hussein and Duraid Adnan contributed reporting from Baghdad, and Iraqi employees of The New York Times from Baquba, Mosul and Anbar Province.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iranians Gather in Grief, Then Face Police

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31iran.html
July 31, 2009
Iranians Gather in Grief, Then Face Police
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [will today result in serious eruptions?] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Thousands of people gathered in Tehran on Thursday to commemorate those killed in Iran’s post-election crackdown, but a vast deployment of

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/asia/31iran.html
July 31, 2009
Iranians Gather in Grief, Then Face Police
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [will today result in serious eruptions?] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Thousands of people gathered in Tehran on Thursday to commemorate those killed in Iran’s post-election crackdown, but a vast deployment of police officers used tear gas and wooden batons to disperse them, in some of the largest and most violent street clashes in weeks.

The mourners gathered at the freshly-dug graves of protesters, including Neda Agha-Soltan, a young woman whose bloodied image has become an icon of the opposition movement. As opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi arrived at the Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery, the police barred him from entering, and angry mourners chanted “Neda lives! Ahmadinejad is dead!” referring to Iran’s president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, witnesses said.

Later, large crowds massed in several areas in central and northern Tehran, but riot police mostly beat them back, and there were reports of a number of arrests.

Opposition leaders had hoped for a vast and peaceful public outpouring, despite the withering summer heat and the Interior Ministry’s refusal to grant permission for the gathering. Outrage over the deaths in prison of several protesters has spread to Iran’s hard-liners in recent days, and Thursday was a day of unusual symbolic importance: [*]the end of the 40-day mourning period after Ms. Agha-Soltan and others were killed. [as has been typical, the thugocracy nipped it in the budd quickly] [*]

But the authorities, after releasing 140 detainees on Tuesday in an apparent effort to defuse the issue, were equally determined to prevent a broad show of popular discontent. Hundreds of police officers surrounded the mourners at the cemetery, and riot police officers began gathering in force in central Tehran early in the day.

On Wednesday, the leader of the Revolutionary Guards in Tehran, Abdullah Araghi, issued a stern warning against any public mourning ritual, saying, “We are not joking — we will confront those who want to fight against the clerical establishment,” the semiofficial Fars news agency reported.

Some opposition supporters were heartened by the turnout on Thursday. “You see they never thought this many people would turn out in the heat like this,” said a 45-year-old woman at the cemetery, where thick crowds of people chanted slogans deriding President Ahmadinejad as a dictator and calling on him to resign. “They can’t stop it now.”

On Thursday, Mohammad Khatami, the reformist former president, became the latest prominent figure to speak out forcefully against prison deaths and abuses that occurred during the crackdown.

“Crimes have taken place and people have died,” Mr. Khatami told a group of lawmakers. “Our people, young women and men, have been treated in ways that if it had taken place in foreign prisons, everyone would be screaming that it must be confronted.”

Conservative figures in Parliament have made similar comments, and at least two investigations of the prison abuses are underway. A number of senior hard-line figures attended a mourning service on Tuesday for one of those who died in prison, Mohsen Ruholamini, the son of an adviser to Mohsen Rezai, a conservative presidential candidate, the Tabnak Web site reported. [secret prisons—Shah-like activities] [*]

On Thursday the government made another conciliatory gesture, moving Saeed Hajjarian, a prominent reformist who is seriously ill, from prison to a “state-owned” house with proper medical facilities, the semiofficial Mehr news agency reported. Two other detainees, a political activist and a journalist, were also released, opposition Web sites reported.

Public anger is rising at a difficult time for Mr. Ahmadinejad, who won the election on June 12 in a landslide that opposition supporters say was rigged. [his inauguration is a week from yesterday so this may be a crucial week that began yesterday and continues into Friday prayers today!] [*]This month Mr. Ahmadinejad refused a direct order from Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to drop a contested cabinet appointment. That provoked many hard-liners, who have warned that he may not last as president if he does not show more respect for the revered Ayatollah Khamenei. The deputy ultimately withdrew, but Mr. Ahmadinejad then named him chief of staff. Some on both sides of Iran’s political divide have linked the prison abuse to Mr. Ahmadinejad’s flouting of Ayatollah Khamenei’s authority, hinting that a broader lack of accountability is the problem. Lawmakers have complained that they were not given access to the those arrested after the election, who are widely believed to be under the control of the Revolutionary Guards. Many in the opposition say the election amounted to a coup by the guards, where Mr. Ahmadinejad spent formative years.

“This is the only way that we can stop everything from falling into the hands of the Revolutionary Guards,” said a 29-year-old physiotherapist who came to the cemetery. “You see, now they don’t even take notice of the clerics, it’s gone that far.”

The mourning ceremony quickly turned into a tense standoff between the police and opposition supporters. At one point, mourners gathered around Mehdi Karroubi, a reformist cleric and presidential candidate. The police surrounded them, apparently trying to intimidate Mr. Karroubi, who spoke to the crowd without a megaphone.

Later, after Mr. Moussavi was denied entry by the police, mourners began chanting angry slogans, and the police charged with their batons, leaving many people bruised and bleeding. A number of people were arrested, including two prominent filmmakers, Jafar Panahi and Mahnaz Mohammadi, Web sites reported.

“I was telling them not to beat this girl — she was on the ground — and then they hit me on the legs,” said a 45-year-old woman, who was sitting on the grass, recovering. “If only these dead would rise up and help us.”

Later, many of the mourners headed to central Tehran to regroup at the Grand Mossalah, a vast prayer hall. But the police had closed the station that is nearest the hall, witnesses said. Instead, the mourners got off one stop before the station, and were met by riot police officers wearing protective gear and clutching bulletproof shields. The police charged at the protesters, scattering them, witnesses said. Similar confrontations took place throughout the evening as protesters gathered in Vanak Square and other places. As in earlier protests, young women were often at the forefront, hurling rocks at riot police officers and shouting in their faces.

“It is clear from the number of people that they have not felt intimidated by the arrests and killings,” one witness said. “The crowd is still as large as it was weeks ago, and you see people from all classes and ages.” [it is rather impressive how many have stood up to the brutality and risked being thrown in secret holes (prisons)] [*]
Robert F. Worth reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Nazila Fathi from Toronto.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iran President Says There’s No Rift

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/07/31/world/AP-ML-Iran-Election.html
July 31, 2009
Iran President Says There’s No Rift
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 8:47 a.m. ET [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [today might be an important bellwether!] [*]
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad lashed out at critics within his own hard-line camp on Friday, denying any rift with Iran's supreme leader, who he said was like a father. [sometimes sons disobey their fathers and perhaps that is what

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/07/31/world/AP-ML-Iran-Election.html
July 31, 2009
Iran President Says There’s No Rift
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 8:47 a.m. ET [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [today might be an important bellwether!] [*]
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) -- President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad lashed out at critics within his own hard-line camp on Friday, denying any rift with Iran's supreme leader, who he said was like a father. [sometimes sons disobey their fathers and perhaps that is what Ahmadinejad is suggesting?] [*]

The bitter feud with conservatives has shaken Ahmadinejad's government at a time when he is already trying to fend off a major challenge from the other end of the political spectrum -- the pro-reform opposition, which says his victory in June 12 presidential elections was fraudulent and that his government is illegitimate.

Conservatives have cast doubt on Ahmadinejad's loyalty to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei because of a dispute over a controversial vice president Ahmadinejad appointed two weeks ago. Hard-liners were outraged by the appointment of Esfandiar Rahim Mashai because he once made comments saying Iranians and Israelis were friends.

Khamenei ordered the dismissal of the vice president, but Ahmadinejad stalled for days, trying to keep Mashai, who is his in-law and a close associate. His defiance further goaded hard-liners. The president finally obeyed the dismissal order, but he promptly appointed Mashai as his chief of staff.

In a speech Friday in the northeastern city of Mashhad, Ahmadinejad said ''some in recent days have portrayed the relationship between the leader and the administration as in doubt, they tried to imply distance and rift.''

''What they do not understand is that the relationship between us and the supreme leader goes beyond politics and administration. It is based on kindness, on ideology, it is like that of a father and son,'' he said in the speech, parts of which were aired on state TV.

He said the attempts by ''ill-wishers'' would yield no results, adding, ''this path with be shut in the face of devils.'' [I love it when he begins babbling like somebody with serious mental illness—mostly because it suggests he truly has serious mental illnesses] [*]

Hard-liners have repeatedly warned Ahmadinejad that his legitimacy will be in doubt if he does not follow the supreme leader, who stands at the top of Iran's clerical leadership and has the final word on all state issues.

Ahmadinejad has feuded with fellow conservatives in the past, particularly because some in his camp believe he gives top posts to close associates rather than spreading out power among the camp's factions. The fight over Mashai could point to an attempt by hard-liners to dictate the makeup of Ahmadinejad's new government, due to be announced in early August.

In a sermon at Tehran's main Friday prayers service, a senior ultra-conservative cleric told Ahmadinejad he must work with parliament on the formation of the next parliament, a veiled demand he take the views of hard-liners there into account.

''Before naming individuals for ministries, the government and parliament must coordinate,'' Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati said. He sharply criticized Ahmadinejad's firing this week of his intelligence minister, Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejehi, apparently in part because of Ejehi's opposition to Mashai.

''I am saying this in a friendly manner ... the appointments and dismissals indeed caused an outcry from the people,'' Jannati said. ''The sudden dismissal of a veteran ... and competent minister is not correct. It is not possible to defend this sort of activities.''

Meanwhile, the government and hard-liners lashed out at mounting criticism over alleged abuse of protesters and activists arrested in the heavy crackdown launched after the disputed election. On Thursday, thousands of opposition supporters held a memorial service in the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery on Tehran's outskirts to commemorate those who died in the suppression. [this business of secret prisons has the stink og the Shah all over it and is therefore dangerous] [it came out yesterday from what I can tell] [*]

Authorities say 30 people were killed in the 7-week-old crackdown, but human rights groups say the number is far higher. In recent days, several young protesters arrested in the sweeps turned up dead, apparently from abuse in prison.

In his sermon, Jannati blamed the opposition – and implicitly its leader Mir Hossein Mousavi – for the deaths, saying they goaded people into protests.

‘’Who killed them? If you hadn’t provoked young people, would they have been killed?’’ Jannati said. ‘’You go to their memorial service, but you should be asking their forgiveness. Those instigators who designed the plan are the ones who did this.’’ [*]

Protests erupted after Mousavi claimed to have won the election and said Ahmadinejad's victory was fraudulent. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in the days following the election, until police, the elite Revolutionary Guards and the Basij militia unleashed their crackdown. Hundreds were arrested, and the number still imprisoned remains unclear.

Khamenei and his allies have depicted the wave of protests as part of a plot fomented by foreign enemies to overthrow the Islamic Republic.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki on Friday blamed foreign countries -- particularly Britain -- for the deaths. ''The countries that intervened are accomplices in all the crimes and murders committed,'' he said in a speech, according to the state news agency IRNA. He said Britain's meddling in Iran's affairs was the ''worst.''

Iran expelled two British diplomats after the election and detained nine local staffers of the embassy, accusing them of fomenting protests. They were later released. [*]

Anger over the crackdown has grown, with even some conservatives criticizing the government over detainee deaths. In an attempt to defuse the anger, Khameni this week ordered the closure of a prison where it is believed several detainees were killed. At least 140 prisoners were released.

But authorities also announced that the first trials of around 20 protesters will begin on Saturday on security-related charges. [today the Sabbath, more or less, and tomorrow’s prosecutions—could be the needed one-two punch] [*]They said senior pro-reform politicians could go on trial later for allegedly organizing the unrest. The trials are likely to anger the opposition, which says detainees have been tortured to obtain confessions for court.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press

Violence Breaks Out In Streets of Tehran

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073000291.html
Violence Breaks Out In Streets of Tehran
Mousavi Kept From Graves of Protesters
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
TEHRAN, July 30 -- Iranian security forces clashed with thousands of demonstrators across Tehran and struggled to maintain control Thursday after opposition leader Mir

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073000291.html
Violence Breaks Out In Streets of Tehran
Mousavi Kept From Graves of Protesters
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
TEHRAN, July 30 -- Iranian security forces clashed with thousands of demonstrators across Tehran and struggled to maintain control Thursday after opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi was prevented from visiting the graves of those killed in protests last month, including 27-year-old Neda Agha Soltan, whose final moments were filmed and broadcast around the world. [4-day anniversary of her death] [important symbolism in Shi’ism] [*]

The clashes were some of the most intense in recent weeks, suggesting that the anger that fueled demonstrations in the days after last month's disputed presidential election continues to run deep. With President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad scheduled to be sworn in for another term next week, Thursday's demonstrations showed that almost 50 days after his apparent victory, authorities have not been successful in stamping out unrest.

Ahmadinejad won the June election in a landslide, according to official results, but opposition candidates say the vote was rigged. Protests in the first days after the election brought hundreds of thousands of people into the streets, shaking the foundations of the Islamic republic before a fierce government crackdown stalled the opposition's momentum.

Security forces worked aggressively Thursday to put down the protests, knowing that any major defeat in the streets could give new energy to the opposition. Police fired tear gas, attacked demonstrators with batons and smashed car windshields. But the protesters fought back, battling hand-to-hand with security forces in some of the most violent confrontations of the summer. In one case, three members of the much-feared voluntary militia known as the Basij were beaten with their own batons after a group of opposition activists pulled them off their motorcycles near a park. [the Basij are in a real pickle] [even the regular police are turning on them] [they will have no way to go but all out against the people if this keeps trending the same way] [watch for indicators] [*] The motorcycles were set on fire, witnesses reported.

"The people have taken over the streets," one witness said Thursday evening before police managed to regain control.

Elsewhere, protesters could be seen throwing stones from an overpass onto security personnel riding motorcycles on a highway below, witnesses reported. Dumpsters were set on fire all around Tehran's [*] [real anger that is building, absent decent leadership] [*]sprawling Mosala prayer complex, where leaders of a movement calling for the annulment of the June 12 election had been denied permission to gather.

Iran's government has severely restricted the activities of journalists, and it was impossible to verify the authenticity of witness reports.

Riot police on Thursday cordoned off Agha Soltan's grave, which has become a point of pilgrimage for Mousavi supporters. When Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, another defeated presidential candidate, arrived near the grave at the vast Behesht-e Zahra cemetery in southern Tehran, hundreds of supporters swarmed their sport-utility vehicle, witnesses reported.

"Regular riot police wearing black helmets and wielding batons attacked us," a witness said by phone. Several people reportedly fell into recently dug graves and were injured. [*]

Two young men were arrested and placed inside a van, but a group of demonstrators broke its windows and were seen pulling the men out of the vehicle, another witness said.

Agha Soltan, who worked in a travel agency, was shot in the heart during an anti-government demonstration June 20. Two cellphone video clips showing her last moments were watched by millions of people worldwide, turning her into the face of Iran's movement against the disputed vote. Bystanders have blamed members of the Basij militia for the killing. Authorities say foreign journalists or protesters killed her.

Thursday marked the 40th day after her death. In Shiite Islam, which predominates in Iran, the third, seventh and 40th days after an individual's death are important times for commemoration. [I must confess I don’t understand the symbolism but there you have it] [*]

A request by Mousavi and other opposition leaders for permission to hold a huge commemoration gathering Thursday was rejected by the Interior Ministry, which is controlled by an ally of Ahmadinejad. Still, Mousavi had called upon his supporters to join him at the cemetery.

That call triggered a strong response by Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps, which has been in control of Tehran since the election. Across the city, cars honked in support of the protesters, and security forces promptly smashed the vehicles' windows. Members of a family were seen being pulled out of their sedan by members of the Basij, after which the car was wrecked by blows from batons.

The protesters responded with violence of their own.

"I saw a man throw a brick right in the face of a riot police officer. He fell on the ground," one witness said.

Protesters lighted candles at Argentine Square, as drivers parked their cars at the normally bustling traffic circle. At other locations, demonstrators shouted slogans such as "Our Neda hasn't died. It's the government that has died," witnesses reported. They also chanted "Death to you" at the security forces, witnesses said.

Earlier, the deputy commander of police, Ahmad-Reza Radan, had said that "the police will harshly confront lawbreakers," according to the Fars News Agency. "The lawbreakers should have no doubt that the police will take any measure to secure the safety of the citizens."

People standing on a public stairway on Vali-e Asr Street taunted a member of the Basij to come up if he dared. [*]The man, in his 30s and wearing a checkered black-and-white shirt, took out a revolver and started shooting but failed to hit anybody. "I saw the round hitting the walls behind the people. It was a miracle no one got hurt," one witness said.

Even as security forces cracked down, the government was trying to appease opponents. Police announced Thursday that they had paid damages to hundreds of people who had been mistreated during previous demonstrations, doling out $50,000 in total.

Earlier in the week, the government closed a major prison where arrested protesters had been held, citing substandard conditions. The closure came after reports emerged in recent days that three detainees had died, and it was interpreted as a gesture of reconciliation by Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But opposition leaders said more was needed to heal the deep rifts in Iranian society.

"It's not enough to say that a substandard detention center has been closed. What does 'substandard' mean? Does it mean the fans weren't working or the toilets weren't clean? No! Murders have been committed, lives have been lost, blood has been spilt," former president Mohammad Khatami said Wednesday at a meeting with parliament members, according to Nowruznews, a Web site close to the opposition. [wow, from an authoritative person] [*]"Our youth, men and women have been treated in such a way that had it been committed in prisons controlled by foreigners, everyone here would be shouting and denouncing it."
Special correspondent Kay Armin Serjoie contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

In Afghanistan, U.S. May Shift Strategy

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003948.html
In Afghanistan, U.S. May Shift Strategy
Request for Big Boost in Afghan Troops Could Also Require More Americans
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Afghanistan] [hydra] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [thus far the “spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [ever since this offensive began, a couple weeks ago now, in southern Afghan [elections just weeks away now and Karzai appears to believe he has a lock] [cross in govt][*]
The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan is preparing a new strategy that calls for major changes in the way U.S. and other NATO troops there operate, a vast increase in the

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/30/AR2009073003948.html
In Afghanistan, U.S. May Shift Strategy
Request for Big Boost in Afghan Troops Could Also Require More Americans
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, July 31, 2009 [Afghanistan] [hydra] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [thus far the “spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [ever since this offensive began, a couple weeks ago now, in southern Afghan [elections just weeks away now and Karzai appears to believe he has a lock] [cross in govt][*]
The top U.S. commander in Afghanistan is preparing a new strategy that calls for major changes in the way U.S. and other NATO troops there operate, a vast increase in the size of Afghan security forces and an intensified military effort to root out corruption [I’m not sure I get why McChrystul does this now?] [what about when the top-to-bottom review was underway in the administration?] [*] among local government officials, according to several people familiar with the contents of an assessment report that outlines his approach to the war.

Gen. Stanley A. McChrystal, who took charge of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan last month, appears inclined to request an increase in American troops to implement the new strategy, which aims to use more unconventional methods to combat the growing Taliban insurgency, [I personally don’t have a problem with it so long as the troops increases are for what it says here: proper implementation of counterinsurgency strategy] [otherwise, I might have problems] [*] according to members of an advisory group he convened to work on the assessment. Such a request could receive a chilly reception at the White House, where some members of President Obama's national security team have expressed reluctance about authorizing any more deployments. [what’s frustrating is the timing] [Obama was properly open to such suggestion a couple months back when the big review concluded] [after accepting recommendations, resourcing it based on those recommendations, and implementation well under way, it’s a strange time now to say oh we need to resource this thing completely differently?] [after all, Patraeus was CENTCINC then; what gives?] [why is Patraeus not more hands on in this matter?] [something about this doesn’t feel quite right] [use psci469b, 355] [*]

Senior military officials said McChrystal is waiting for a recommendation from a team of military planners in Kabul before reaching a final decision on a troop request. Several members of the advisory group, who spoke about the issue of force levels on the condition of anonymity, said that they think more U.S. troops are needed but that it was not clear how large an increase McChrystal would seek. [there’s some formula or other for each infantry (or say counterinsurgency troop) there’s another X number of logistics needed and X number for proper rotations and so on] [*]

"There was a very broad consensus on the part of the assessment team that the effort is under-resourced and will require additional resources to get the job done," a senior military official in Kabul said.

A request for more U.S. troops in Afghanistan could pose a political challenge for Obama. Some leading congressional Democrats have voiced skepticism about sustaining current force levels, set to reach 68,000 by the fall. After approving an extra 21,000 troops in the spring, Obama himself questioned whether "piling on more and more troops" would lead to success, and his national security adviser, James L. Jones, told U.S. military commanders in Afghanistan last month that the administration wants to hold troop levels flat for now. [which makes it stranger still that McChrystul is apparently going to ask for more] [if I’m the president, I want to talk to the general face to face and have him explain why now after the train of steps well underway?] [why is your recommendation to disrupt all that’s been set in motion now?] [I would want a intimate feel for what my theater commander was doing] [*]

One senior administration official said some members of Obama's national security team want to see how McChrystal uses the 21,000 additional troops before any more deployments are authorized. "It'll be a tough sell," the official said.

Even so, McChrystal has been instructed by his superiors -- including Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. Mike Mullen -- to conduct a thorough assessment of the war effort and articulate his recommendations. [once again—recall this was the case when the overall review was underway—Patraeus is noticeably absent from these leaks, or I should say from these putative discussions] [I want to know why?] [never has Patraeus been one to avoid the limelights] [so what gives now?] [has he effectively distanced himself from Odierno in –Iraq and seeking the same in AfPak despite being CENTCINC??] [and if so, what does he know that makes him see trouble ahead?] [*] While McChrystal has indicated to some of his advisers that he is leaning toward asking for more forces, he has also emphasized that his strategy will involve fundamental changes in the way those troops are used.

One of the key changes outlined in the latest drafts of the assessment report, which will be provided to Gates by mid-August, is a shift in the "operational culture" of U.S. and NATO forces. Commanders will be encouraged to increase contact with Afghans, even if it means living in less-secure outposts inside towns and spending more time on foot patrols instead of in vehicles.

"McChrystal understands that you don't stop IEDs [improvised explosive devices] by putting your soldiers in MRAPs," [*] [I actually agree and understand the thinking here but it’s a difficult sell when the lives of young, patriotic men and women are on the line] [*] heavily armored trucks designed to withstand blasts, said Andrew Exum, a fellow at the Center for a New American Security in Washington who served on the assessment team. "You stop them by convincing the population not to plant them in the first place, and that requires getting out of trucks and interacting with people."

The report calls for intelligence resources to be realigned to focus more on tribal and social dynamics so commanders can identify local power brokers and work with them. Until recently, the vast majority of U.S. and NATO intelligence assets had been oriented toward tracking insurgents.

The changes are aimed at fulfilling McChrystal's view that the primary mission of the international forces is not to conduct raids against Taliban strongholds but to protect civilians and help the Afghan government assume responsibility [I would like to hear what Aussie has to say about it?] [look for Colonel Killcullen] [*]for maintaining security. "The focus has to be on the people," he said in a recent interview.

To accomplish that, McChrystal has indicated that he is considering moving troops out of remote mountain valleys where Taliban fighters have traditionally sought sanctuary and concentrating more forces around key population centers. [wow, that sounds pretty smart, though it entails hard slogging, to be sure] [*]

The assessment report also urges the United States and NATO to almost double the size of the Afghan security forces. It calls for expanding the Afghan army from 134,000 soldiers to about 240,000, and the police force from 92,000 personnel to about 160,000. Such an increase would require additional U.S. forces to conduct training and mentoring.

McChrystal and his top lieutenants have expressed concern about a lack of Afghan soldiers to patrol alongside foreign troops and to take responsibility for protecting pacified areas from Taliban infiltration. [that is an important concern but the question is whether you conclude that Afghanis are not up to the task (for any number of reasons they see no compelling reason to make those sacrifices) or that temporary issues are causing the shortage] [*] In Helmand province, where U.S. Marines are engaged in a major operation, fewer than 500 Afghan soldiers are available to work with almost 11,000 American service members.

Some U.S. and European officials involved in Afghanistan policy warn that the Afghan government does not have the means to pay for such a large army and police force, but McChrystal and his assessment team believe additional Afghan troops are essential to the country's stability. [who pays for it and how many allies sholdier what share would not particularly be McChrystul’s balliwick as far as I’m concerned] [those are mostly political questions] [*] U.S. officials have said that they would like European nations to help cover the cost of training and sustaining additional Afghan forces.

The strategy advocates changes in what happens after Afghan soldiers graduate from boot camp. Instead of just placing small groups of U.S. trainers with Afghan units, the assessment calls for a top-to-bottom partnership between Afghan and NATO security forces that involves everyone from generals to privates working in tandem. "We've got to live together, we've got to train together, we've got to conduct operations together," one senior U.S. military official in Kabul said. "Everything we do has to be done together."

The assessment also calls for U.S. and NATO forces to be far more involved in fighting corruption and promoting effective governance, describing the risk to the overall mission from ineffective and venal government officials as being on par with the threat from top Taliban commanders. "These are co-equal ways we could lose the war," said Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations who served on the assessment team.

The team, which spent more than a dozen hours meeting with McChrystal over the past month, was made up of several prominent national security specialists from a variety of think thanks in Washington, including the American Enterprise Institute, the Brookings Institution and the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Musharraf’s ’07 Actions Ruled Illegal

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/07/31/world/AP-AS-Pakistan.html
July 31, 2009
Musharraf’s ’07 Actions Ruled Illegal
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 11:03 a.m. ET [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [former President Musharraf and his legal problems (among other things his coup d’etat to get into office in 1999)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD (AP) -- Pakistan's Supreme Court ruled Friday that former President Pervez Musharraf's imposition of emergency rule in 2007 was unconstitutional, [so

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2009/07/31/world/AP-AS-Pakistan.html
July 31, 2009
Musharraf’s ’07 Actions Ruled Illegal
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 11:03 a.m. ET [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [former President Musharraf and his legal problems (among other things his coup d’etat to get into office in 1999)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD (AP) -- Pakistan's Supreme Court ruled Friday that former President Pervez Musharraf's imposition of emergency rule in 2007 was unconstitutional, [so bookends of extraconstitutionality for America’s ally Musharraf: 1999 coupe and 2007 imposition of marshal law] [*] state and private media outlets reported.

Details were still coming to light, but the ruling could invalidate the appointments of judges made by Musharraf in the six weeks after he suspended the constitution on Nov. 3, 2007.

It also may strengthen the case for bringing treason charges against the former military ruler, further jolting Pakistan's political establishment at a time when the U.S. wants it to focus on battling a Taliban insurgency.

The 14-member bench that delivered the ruling was headed by Chief Justice Iftikhar Mohammed Chaudhry, whose attempted ouster by Musharraf spurred much of the political turmoil that ultimately led to the former army chief's downfall. [I gues Chaudhry gets the last laugh??] [*]

Musharraf, a longtime U.S. ally, declared the emergency when it appeared the Supreme Court might challenge his eligibility for office. The emergency -- which was accompanied by mass detentions and harsh media restrictions -- enraged an already emboldened opposition. It was lifted after six weeks.

Eventually, under domestic and international pressure, Musharraf allowed elections that brought his foes to power in February 2008. Under threat of impeachment, he stepped down in August 2008.

Ever since, many opponents have demanded he be held accountable.

Musharraf, who is staying in London, ignored a summons to appear before the court or send a lawyer this week to explain his actions. In the past, he has defended the moves as being in the interest of the country. [he’ll eventually want to return home I imagine so he’ll have to deal with it] [*]

The court's announcement Friday was eagerly awaited by many Pakistanis, especially lawyers who led a movement that helped push Musharraf out of office. Many gathered at various locations across the country to await news of the ruling. Afterward, they danced in the streets and cheered.

Musharraf seized power in a 1999 military coup and became a key ally in the U.S.-led war against al-Qaida following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks that sparked the American-led invasion of neighboring Afghanistan.

In early 2007, Musharraf dismissed Chaudhry as chief justice. That triggered mass protests led by lawyers that damaged Musharraf's popularity.

The court managed to bring Chaudhry back, but -- faced with growing rancor and fearing he could be ousted -- Musharraf declared the emergency, tossing out Chaudhry and around 60 other judges. That only deepened popular anger against the military ruler. [*]

Under domestic pressure, and prodding from the U.S., Musharraf lifted the emergency, stepped down as army chief and allowed parliamentary elections to take place the following February.

The elections brought his political foes to power, but even after Musharraf's resignation, the fate of the judges, especially that of Chaudhry, caused fissures among those who came to power.

A coalition government consisting of Asif Ali Zardari's Pakistan People's Party and Nawaz Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League-N fell apart over the slow pace of reinstating the ousted jurists. [*]

Ultimately, facing escalating lawyer-led protests reminiscent of Musharraf's era, now-President Zardari agreed to reinstate Chaudhry -- whom he'd viewed as too political a figure -- in March.

Ever since, there have been rumblings in some corners about whether Musharraf would have to answer in court for his actions, and court petitions were filed over the issue. [he didn’t just head to London for the moist, foggy air] [*]

Some argue that holding Musharraf accountable would deter military strongmen from trying to seize power in the future and give a chance for democratic institutions to grow in a country that has spent about half its existence under army rule.

The flip side is that pursuing Musharraf could shake the political establishment and reopen old wounds at a time when Pakistan faces huge tasks in battling Taliban insurgents and reviving its economy. [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

July 30, 2009

Amid Scrutiny, Yoo Pushes Back

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/26/AR2009072602348.html
Amid Scrutiny, Yoo Pushes Back
Quietly but Forcefully, Author of Detainee Memos Rebuts Critics
By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 27, 2009 [attorney John Yoo] [we now know that his direct supervisors, Comey and others, say they were not told when the White House (especially the vice president’s office and David Addington and others) reached down for specific memos from this guy it was not due to his broad-based intelligence or brilliance seen by his cohort] [rather, he was a known wingnut with ideas that were out there: his reading of the Consitution comes down to all the stuff about the legislative and judicial branches is embellishment] [once the commander in chief is activiated—and Yoo seems to think it’s virtally always activated—he has power that no other branch can mitigate or constrain] [it defies the most basic understanding of rule of law!] [it belies an otherwise literal reading (that’s what he does, though quite selectively) of say article I that comes before the executive’s article II and could reasonably be read literally as only when congress declares a war does the president’s war power authority kick in] [he was ideological enough to suit the wingnut contingent that ran amok during the Bush presidency] [the irony of it all is we have President Bush to thank that it didn’t go futher] [e.g., the Lackawanna NY example where President Bush shouted down the Cheney wing on sending in the military contrary to posse comitatus and others] [*]
Some public figures, if their judgment and ethics come under fire, retreat into solitude.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/26/AR2009072602348.html
Amid Scrutiny, Yoo Pushes Back
Quietly but Forcefully, Author of Detainee Memos Rebuts Critics
By Carrie Johnson
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, July 27, 2009 [attorney John Yoo] [we now know that his direct supervisors, Comey and others, say they were not told when the White House (especially the vice president’s office and David Addington and others) reached down for specific memos from this guy it was not due to his broad-based intelligence or brilliance seen by his cohort] [rather, he was a known wingnut with ideas that were out there: his reading of the Consitution comes down to all the stuff about the legislative and judicial branches is embellishment] [once the commander in chief is activiated—and Yoo seems to think it’s virtally always activated—he has power that no other branch can mitigate or constrain] [it defies the most basic understanding of rule of law!] [it belies an otherwise literal reading (that’s what he does, though quite selectively) of say article I that comes before the executive’s article II and could reasonably be read literally as only when congress declares a war does the president’s war power authority kick in] [he was ideological enough to suit the wingnut contingent that ran amok during the Bush presidency] [the irony of it all is we have President Bush to thank that it didn’t go futher] [e.g., the Lackawanna NY example where President Bush shouted down the Cheney wing on sending in the military contrary to posse comitatus and others] [*]
Some public figures, if their judgment and ethics come under fire, retreat into solitude. Then there is John C. Yoo.

The former Justice Department official, whose memos blessed the waterboarding of terrorism suspects and wiretapping of American citizens, has come out fighting, even as negative assessments of his government service pile up. [*]

Last month, a federal judge in California refused to dismiss a lawsuit that accuses Yoo of violating a detainee's constitutional rights. This month, the Justice Department's inspector general described Yoo's legal analysis of the Bush surveillance program as "insufficient" and sometimes inaccurate. [he reads up to a portion then determines plenary power as kicked in beyond which nobody can get a constraining word in edge wise ‘cause the president has become superpowerful (commander in chief) and anything the president says is threatening to the security of the US is, by definition, threatening to the security of the US!] [I find it diffucult to just how obtuse this fellow is and whether it’s intentional or if he’s actually that dim?] [I don’t normally like to think so poorly of my fellow human beings but I really struggle with this man’s extraordinarily narrow terms of reference] [for instance, he appears to fold up the most basic, intuitive understanding (a basic civics course understanding) of “rule of law”—a boyscout understanding] [*] Also expected in coming weeks is a department ethics report that sources have said could renounce Yoo's approval of harsh CIA interrogation practices and recommend that he and Jay S. Bybee, a former colleague, be referred to their state bar associations for discipline.

While former colleagues have avoided attention in the face of such scrutiny, Yoo has been traveling across the country to give speeches and counter critics who dispute his bold view of the president's authority. Now a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley, he engages in polite but firm exchanges with legal scholars over conclusions in their academic work. [*]This month, he wrote an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal defending his actions and labeling critics' arguments as "absurd" and "foolhardy" responses to "the media-stoked politics of recrimination." [well, he’s apparently quite willing to take ad hominem swipes at his fellow law cohort so I suppose I shouldn’t be bound by my normal standard of assuming the best about someone until and unless his-her actions demand I must take dimmer view] [*]

The uncompromising rhetoric can be hard to square with a soft-voiced man who easily made friends at Harvard University and Yale Law School, without regard for ideological affiliation. But the blaze of criticism that ignited late in the Bush administration appears to have pushed Yoo, 42, onto a far more assertive path, according to friends and lawyers who have followed his career.

In many ways, Yoo, who declined to comment for this article, has become the face of what critics see as the Bush era's legal overreaching -- all tied to memos written from 2001 to 2003 spelling out his expansive views of interrogation, electronic surveillance and the deployment of soldiers on U.S. soil.

They were ideas born early in his legal career, before stints as a law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and Judge Laurence H. Silberman of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Those positions, which even friends call extreme, endeared him to a Bush White House seeking to adopt a centralized approach to power.

Six months into a new administration, Yoo is a man with little to lose. As a tenured law professor, he has held onto his job despite protesters who have picketed the Berkeley campus and petitioned school leaders for his ouster.

Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. has rejected the idea of criminal investigations of Bush lawyers who developed counterterrorism policy. Probes announced by authorities in Spain and Germany could take years, and the five-year statute of limitations for allegations of attorney misconduct in Pennsylvania, where Yoo is licensed to practice law, has expired. That makes it unlikely the state bar will take up an ethics inquiry into his work at the Justice Department, which he left in 2003.

He departed after then-Attorney General John D. Ashcroft, angry over Yoo's back-door conversations with Vice President Richard B. Cheney's office on national security issues, refused to recommend him for the top job at the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel.

Now, as Yoo navigates his various legal challenges, he and the Justice Department have once more parted ways.

This month, government lawyers who had been representing Yoo since his departure from the department told a federal judge in San Francisco that "private counsel will be assuming representation of Mr. Yoo" in a case filed by Jose Padilla, a onetime domestic terrorism suspect who was held without criminal charge for more than five years. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White allowed Padilla and his mother to pursue the case, which argued that Yoo had violated Padilla's civil rights by authorizing the government's terrorist-detention policies. [this is an example] [I have seen others who have argued intellectual cases of relatively extensive incarcerations under one provision or another] [but he doesn’t seem compelled to such trivial concerns] [rather, he simply defines away minimal standard on which Western legal tradition have stood since atleast the Magna Carta, habeus petitions as protection against potentially overwrought tyrannical power] [*]

In a single sentence, the judge crystallized the ongoing public debate about Yoo, describing it as a struggle to balance the anti-terrorism effort with "using tactics of terror" to win. [where does he find this Machiavelli dualism in the Constitution?] [if he actually made some far-out intellectual argument I would at least entertain it and possibly defer to his intellectual acumen since I left law school so early!] [but he doesn’t] [instead he seems to be fabricating a facile lier-lier-pants-on-fire standard and little else] [since he thinks the world is a tough place (granted) and in such an environment we in the US mustn’t actually consider the whole of the corpus that constitutes US jurisprudence (Federalist Papers, the Bill of Rights, the actual Constitution, others all in their entirety) but simply generate aphorisms such as in such a hostile environment, the ends may be used to justify the means—on such basic levels it flies in the face of the corpus] [*]

Yoo, who argued that he enjoys immunity from lawsuits because he was acting as a government official, will appeal the decision and is being represented by prominent Supreme Court advocate Miguel Estrada. Estrada will work at the government rate of $200 per hour, reimbursed by taxpayers because Yoo is being sued in connection with his government service.

Department spokeswoman Tracy Schmaler said in a statement that "as this case moves forward, the defendant deserves the opportunity to retain defense counsel that can make any and all arguments available on his behalf."

Lawyers not involved in the case say the shift to private counsel spares new Justice Department leaders from having to defend Yoo's sweeping views of presidential power and his memos. It also liberates Yoo to assert that he was acting at the behest of Cheney, President George W. Bush, adviser David Addington and then-White House counsel Alberto R. Gonzales, an argument legal sources said he may make if the case progresses. [from everthing I have read, I don’t think there is any question but that he was working directly for Vice President Cheney (through Addington, and somewhat surprisingly never through Libby that I’ve read)] [I would support his argument absolutely] [further, it appears to me as if Cheney would willingly through Yoo under the bus and, in the spirit of comity, Yoo ought to reciprocate and may actually be doing so in his arument] [*]

Yoo has broken off ties with some former colleagues who criticized his work at Justice. But he does not shy away from public appearances. He and his wife Elsa, the daughter of former CNN newsman Peter Arnett, still socialize with friends on the West Coast. In addition to teaching, Yoo writes a regular legal-opinion column, dubbed "Closing Arguments," for his hometown newspaper, the Philadelphia Inquirer. Editors were deluged with complaints after the arrangement became public. [*] [like so many conservatives, they have extensive networks to ensure that they have full bank accounts so that they never give up their own (that is, never drop dime on fellow conservatives)] [*]

Jesse Choper, a Berkeley colleague of Yoo's, said he thinks "very highly" of his scholarship, even if they disagree on some issues. "This is not a person who goes around raging or screaming at people -- quite the opposite," Choper said. [I’ve never accused him if ranting] [I’ve never seen him raise his voice even slightly] [he seem a genuinely good-natured fellow] [I wonder if he’s not keeping some of that frustration in too tightly—wrapped too tightly? He is surely bright enough to know that Cheney (et al.) are willing to sacrifice him because they have so many layers between the two groups of people that they have no fear of his demise leading to their; but if he’s as frustrated as I believe he may be, they perhaps should worry a little] [*]

Just last week, Yoo once again drew attention after a video of Australian comedians infiltrating his classroom swept the Web. One comic was dressed in a black garment reminiscent of the garb worn by detainees photographed at the Iraqi prison Abu Ghraib. "How long can I be required to stand here till it counts as torture?" the man asked.

Yoo awkwardly concluded the class, and gently told the comedians that he would give them a few minutes to disperse before he called security.

Yoo's vocal justifications stand in contrast to the muted approach of former Justice Department colleagues also under scrutiny by ethics investigators. Bybee, now a federal appeals court judge in California, led the Office of Legal Counsel while Yoo worked there. Bybee has told students and colleagues that he has regrets about how the controversial memos have been viewed and how they were prepared. [I don’t recall if it was Bybee or one of the others who is a fellow BYU alumnus?] [*]

Steven G. Bradbury, who took over from Bybee but never won Senate confirmation, quietly joined the Dechert law firm in Washington as a partner last week.

To his lasting regret, friends say, Yoo never got a chance to appear at his nomination hearing. Last year, though, Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee summoned him for what became a hostile session on the origins of the interrogation strategies that critics assert are torture.

As former vice presidential aide Addington slouched in his seat, glaring at lawmakers and offering dismissive replies, Yoo scanned a crowd filled with protesters and reporters. His dark eyes widened as he appeared to search for a friendly face. He did not find one. [I actually feel some pitty because I think they have used him as they are wont to do] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Administration Seeks More Time on Transfer

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903517.html
Nation Digest
Thursday, July 30, 2009
GUANTANAMO BAY
Administration Seeks More Time on Transfer
[Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
The Obama administration wants to hold on to a Guantanamo Bay detainee three weeks longer while it tries to decide whether to send him home to Afghanistan or bring

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903517.html
Nation Digest
Thursday, July 30, 2009
GUANTANAMO BAY
Administration Seeks More Time on Transfer
[Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
The Obama administration wants to hold on to a Guantanamo Bay detainee three weeks longer while it tries to decide whether to send him home to Afghanistan or bring him to the United States for trial.

Government attorneys said in court filings Wednesday that they were prepared to release Mohammed Jawad from detention at the U.S. naval facility in Cuba. He has been held there for 6 1/2 years since being arrested on suspicion of wounding two U.S. troops and their interpreter by throwing a grenade at their Jeep in Afghanistan.

But the government did not specify where he would go next. Prosecutors are trying to build a criminal case against Jawad, but they also are preparing for the possibility that they may not get a grand jury indictment or that the judge could compel them to release him.

Jawad's attorneys have asked U.S. District Judge Ellen S. Huvelle to allow their client to return to Afghanistan immediately. Huvelle has scheduled a hearing in the case for Thursday morning in U.S. District Court in Washington.
-- Associated Press
LEGAL
Sorority Accuses Head Of Misappropriation
Members of the country's oldest black sorority are suing to remove their president, alleging that she spent hundreds of thousands of dollars of the group's money on herself -- some of it to pay for a wax statue in her own likeness.

In the suit, the Alpha Kappa Alpha members also alleged that International President Barbara McKinzie bought designer clothing, jewelry and lingerie with the sorority credit card.

The lawsuit, filed in the District, also accused the sorority's board of directors of signing off on spending funds on McKinzie without the required approval by the group's membership. It demands that McKinzie be fired and return money to the sorority.

McKinzie denied what she called the lawsuit's "malicious allegations," saying they were "based on mischaracterizations and fabrications . . . not befitting our ideals of sisterhood, ethics and service," according to a statement issued by the sorority.

She took particular offense to the accusation that she commissioned a life-size wax figure of herself that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. She said a total of $45,000 was spent on a wax figure of her and the sorority's first international president, the late Nellie Quander. McKinzie also said the expenses were "consistent with furthering AKA's mission" and did not violate any of the group's bylaws.
-- Associated Press
Judge Grants Authority to Stevens Prosecutor: U.S. District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan has granted a special prosecutor authority to compel testimony from the Justice Department team that took then-Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) to trial. Sullivan presided over Stevens's trial last year and appointed Henry Schuelke III to investigate the prosecutors after the case fell apart over charges of prosecutorial misconduct.
-- Associated Press
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

File Sharing Leaks Sensitive Federal Data, Lawmakers Are Told

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902273.html
File Sharing Leaks Sensitive Federal Data, Lawmakers Are Told
By Brian Krebs and Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [popular computer technology that allows file sharing] [tas we have slowly but alarmingly discovered, such technology allows people with intention of doing the US harm to find all sorts of classified things on people’s hardrives] [followup] [that is, the technology that allows music and video swaping also has been found to facilitate serious breaches of US security] [for instance, some guy who works for defense contractor; he has stuff on his computer that he’s careful never to show others per classification protocols’ however, his kid gets on and logs into some file sharing site whereupon all sorts of files from mom’s-dad’s harddrive is scrutinized and downloaded by 3rd party intending harm for US—we’ve seen it time and again now over the past 8 or so years] [use psci355] [*]
The indiscriminate use of a popular online data-sharing technology has led to the disclosure of sensitive government and personal information -- including FBI surveillance photos of a Mafia hit man, lists of people with HIV, and motorcade routes

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902273.html
File Sharing Leaks Sensitive Federal Data, Lawmakers Are Told
By Brian Krebs and Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [popular computer technology that allows file sharing] [tas we have slowly but alarmingly discovered, such technology allows people with intention of doing the US harm to find all sorts of classified things on people’s hardrives] [followup] [that is, the technology that allows music and video swaping also has been found to facilitate serious breaches of US security] [for instance, some guy who works for defense contractor; he has stuff on his computer that he’s careful never to show others per classification protocols’ however, his kid gets on and logs into some file sharing site whereupon all sorts of files from mom’s-dad’s harddrive is scrutinized and downloaded by 3rd party intending harm for US—we’ve seen it time and again now over the past 8 or so years] [use psci355] [*]
The indiscriminate use of a popular online data-sharing technology has led to the disclosure of sensitive government and personal information -- including FBI surveillance photos of a Mafia hit man, lists of people with HIV, and motorcade routes and safe-house locations for then-first lady Laura Bush, [*]a congressional panel was told on Wednesday. [and that’s just the stuff they know and are willing to fess up] [*]

The information is often exposed inadvertently by people who download the technology to share music or other files, not realizing that the "peer-to-peer" software also makes the contents of their computers available to other users, experts said.

The issue is so pressing that the chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, Rep. Edolphus Towns (D-N.Y.), said he would introduce a bill to ban such software from all government and contractor computers and networks.

"The administration should initiate a national campaign to educate consumers about the dangers involved with file-sharing software," he said. [*]

Robert Boback, chief executive of Tiversa, a company that scours music- and file-sharing networks on the Internet for sensitive data, said the use of such software is being exploited by foreign governments for espionage and other purposes. "Other countries know how to access this information and they are accessing this information," he said.

Boback told the committee that Tiversa found FBI surveillance photos of an alleged hit man on the Internet while he was still on trial. The company also found the government's confidential witness list for that trial, which included the names of some people in the government's witness protection program. He said the company found the documents while scouring the networks for other data for a client. [*]

Boback, who was asked by the committee not to publicly identify the hit man, said the defendant was recently convicted and sent to prison for life.

"This is not information you want to have out there," he said.

A spokesman for the FBI said late Wednesday that he did not have enough information to comment on the surveillance photos. The Secret Service said that the motorcade routes and safe-house locations are not classified or top secret. Such data is "not of any value" after an event, said Secret Service spokesman Malcolm Wiley. "And if something like that were to emerge before an event, keep in mind, we've got other security countermeasures in place."

In addition to the list of people with HIV, which included Social Security numbers, Tiversa discovered records with full psychological assessments of patients with conditions such as bipolar disorder. [*]

Alan Paller, director of research at SANS Institute, a computer-security training group, said that health data are a new target of organized-crime groups. Experts say a copy of a medical record can fetch money on the Internet black market.

"This is unbelievably sensitive medical data," said Deborah Peel, founder of Patient Privacy Rights, a health-privacy advocacy group. "It has people's names on it from mental-health treatment programs, drug studies. All of these medical files have everything needed for identity theft, the most prominent and frightening consumer issue with electronic systems." [*] [imagine the lawsuits waiting to happen] [tort cases with civil penalties up the wazoo] [*]

Towns said he would ask the Federal Trade Commission to investigate whether inadequate safeguards on file-sharing software constitute an unfair trade practice.

Mark Gorton, chairman of the Lime Group, which makes LimeWire, one of the most popular peer-to-peer, or P2P, programs, told the committee that the latest version of his company's software makes it extremely difficult to accidentally share sensitive documents.

He said that any effort to regulate the industry would be difficult, as LimeWire is one of hundreds of such software providers. "Most creators of P2P applications are not based in the United States, and may not even be corporations," Gorton said.
The Department of Homeland Security warns that file-sharing technology exposes users' computers to infection, attack or exposure of personal information. It recommends avoiding the software. [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

House Seems To Be Set on Pork-Padded Defense Bill

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902676.html
House Seems To Be Set on Pork-Padded Defense Bill
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 and a bunch of other relics that mini stimulus bills in various congressional districts] [where Congress dictates to Pentagon what it will buy—so that jobs are protected and/or created in home districts] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [the thing is, when this is discovered, the tendency should be to correct them whereas apparently what happens is an effort to conceal] [followup] [the military-industrial(-congressional) complex was consciously set up this way] [Ms. Eisenhower noted that her father’s speech scratched the congressional part because he had enjoyed a good working relationship with Congress and he didn’t want to be seen as taking a shot at them on his way out!] [use psci355] [*]
The Democratic-controlled House is poised to give the Pentagon dozens of new ships, planes, helicopters and armored vehicles that Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates says the military does not need to fund next year, acting in many cases in response to defense industry pressures and campaign contributions under an approach he has

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902676.html
House Seems To Be Set on Pork-Padded Defense Bill
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, Air Force] [the F-22 and a bunch of other relics that mini stimulus bills in various congressional districts] [where Congress dictates to Pentagon what it will buy—so that jobs are protected and/or created in home districts] [and like every other military program ever built, it’s got some problems] [the thing is, when this is discovered, the tendency should be to correct them whereas apparently what happens is an effort to conceal] [followup] [the military-industrial(-congressional) complex was consciously set up this way] [Ms. Eisenhower noted that her father’s speech scratched the congressional part because he had enjoyed a good working relationship with Congress and he didn’t want to be seen as taking a shot at them on his way out!] [use psci355] [*]
The Democratic-controlled House is poised to give the Pentagon dozens of new ships, planes, helicopters and armored vehicles that Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates says the military does not need to fund next year, acting in many cases in response to defense industry pressures and campaign contributions under an approach he has decried as "business as usual" and vowed to help end.

The unwanted equipment in a military spending bill expected to come to a vote on the House floor Thursday or Friday has a price tag of at least $6.9 billion. [*]

The White House has said that some but not all of the extra expenditures could draw a presidential veto of the Defense Department's entire $636 billion budget for 2010, and it sent a message to House lawmakers Tuesday urging them to cut expenditures for items that "duplicate existing programs, or that have outlived their usefulness." [President Obama needs to follow through now or forever hold his tongue!] [*]

While the administration won a big victory when the Senate voted July 21 to end the F-22 fighter-jet program, the House's imminent action demonstrates its continued rebellion on many other Obama administration military spending priorities. Gates continues to struggle with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle who are loyal to existing military programs benefiting contractors that provide jobs and large campaign donations.

House appropriators want to buy, for example, extra C-17 transport planes and F-18 jets, as well as four extra military jets used by lawmakers and Pentagon VIPs. And they want to keep alive a troubled missile-defense interceptor program and continue the troubled VH-71 presidential helicopter program. [*]

Gates vowed in April to fundamentally overhaul the military's "approach to procurement, acquisition and contracting" and urged Congress to support the termination of many traditional weapons programs in favor of more spending on counterinsurgency efforts and operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. In this round, those Democratic and Republican lawmakers who support maintaining or expanding programs that Gates proposed to eliminate or trim appear likely to prevail, because an unusually restrictive rule for floor debate agreed upon Wednesday will allow only amendments that could strip less than half of the spending the administration did not request.

Roughly $2.75 billion of the extra funds -- all of which were unanimously approved in an 18-minute markup Monday by the House Appropriations Committee -- would finance "earmarks," or projects demanded by individual lawmakers that the Pentagon did not request. About half of that amount reflects spending requested by private firms, including 95 companies or related political action committees that donated a total of $789,190 in the past 2 1/2 years to members of the appropriations subcommittee on defense, [*]according to an analysis by Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonprofit watchdog group.

Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), a government-spending critic who has long campaigned against such earmarks, has said he will try again Thursday to strike all such spending. But his prior earmark-stripping efforts have succeeded only once in dozens of attempts, and never on defense spending. [*]

"Simply put, Members of Congress should not have the ability to award no-bid contracts" to private firms, Flake said in a statement explaining the 540 proposed amendments he plans to bring up. "The practice has created an ethical cloud over Congress, and it needs to end." He noted that at least 70 of the earmarks are for former clients of the PMA Group, a lobbying firm close to appropriations subcommittee head John P. Murtha (D-Pa.) that is now being probed by the Justice Department and the House ethics committee. [*]

Although President Obama has repeatedly criticized earmarks, the White House statement of policy on the House bill obliquely criticized only "programs that fund narrowly focused activities." No mention was made of items such as a proposed $8 million Defense Department grant Murtha inserted for Argon ST, a Pennsylvania military contractor that has contributed $35,200 to him in the past four years, or of a $5 million grant Rep. C.W. Bill Young (R-Fla.) inserted for DRS Technologies, a Florida contractor that has contributed $46,350 to Young during that period, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense.

The White House criticized the addition of $80 million for the Kinetic Energy Interceptor program, which Gates and other Pentagon officials have said is technically troubled, behind schedule, and billions of dollars over budget. But Northrop Grumman, the principal contractor, is building a technology center in Murtha's district [*]that would bring 150 related jobs, and Murtha's subcommittee sought its continuation as a way "to recoup the technology," according to an appropriations staff member, who was not authorized to speak on the record.

A spokesman for Murtha did not reply to a request for comment.

In its letter to the House, the White House also specifically targeted the committee's addition of $400 million to finish five VH-71 presidential helicopters. Obama has said he does not want them, and Gates ridiculed them in a July 16 speech in Chicago as helicopters that "cost nearly half a billion dollars each" and would enable the president to "cook dinner while in flight under nuclear attack." [probably not actually necessary] [*]

Murtha countered a week later that he was upset at the idea that the Pentagon would spend $3.2 billion on such a program and "get nothing out of it," adding: "That's unacceptable." He also suggested in a session with defense reporters that the Pentagon really did not want to kill the VH-1: "It's not the Defense Department. The Defense Department is speaking for the White House," he said.

Many lawmakers have similarly argued that despite what Gates and his top appointees have been saying, the military services have repeatedly let them know they want to continue programs formally stricken from the Pentagon's budget request. Gates tried to restrict such behind-the-scenes lobbying for weeks after his April announcement, but he eventually relented under sharp criticism from lawmakers and contractors.

Regarding the disputed C-17 transport aircraft, for example, senior defense officials have formally testified that those purchased in previous years, in combination with upgraded C-5 aircraft, will be sufficient to meet any conceivable military needs. But the committee added $674 million for three unwanted planes because "the Air Force will say on the record that they don't support it, but if you ask them off the record if they will actually use the planes, they will say, 'Absolutely,' " said a House staff member who also was not allowed to speak on the record.

Political action committees affiliated with Boeing, the C-17's principal manufacturer, donated $161,500 to House defense appropriations subcommittee members since the beginning of 2007, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense.
Staff researcher Madonna Lebling contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Wife Defends Husband and Sons Charged in Terror Plot

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/us/30terror.html
July 30, 2009
Wife Defends Husband and Sons Charged in Terror Plot
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [*]
RALEIGH, N.C. — The wife of Daniel P. Boyd, one of seven men charged by federal authorities with supporting violent jihadist movements overseas, said in interviews released Wednesday that he and two of their sons, who were also charged, are innocent of the government’s accusations.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/us/30terror.html
July 30, 2009
Wife Defends Husband and Sons Charged in Terror Plot
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [*]
RALEIGH, N.C. — The wife of Daniel P. Boyd, one of seven men charged by federal authorities with supporting violent jihadist movements overseas, said in interviews released Wednesday that he and two of their sons, who were also charged, are innocent of the government’s accusations.

She was also sharply critical of how federal agents treated her on Monday during the arrests.

Mr. Boyd has been described as the ringleader of the men arrested on Monday. An eighth man is still at large.

A federal law enforcement official in Washington, speaking on condition of anonymity because of the pending prosecution, confirmed that the eighth man is Jude Kenan Mohammad, a 20-year-old American citizen from Raleigh. Mr. Mohammad is thought to be in Pakistan.

Also on Wednesday, a judge postponed detention hearings for the seven men until Aug. 4 to give defense lawyers more time to prepare. The hearings had been scheduled for Thursday.

The public defender’s office is representing Mr. Boyd; the others will have court-appointed lawyers.

In interviews with The Raleigh News and Observer and CNN, Mr. Boyd’s wife, Sabrina Boyd, rebutted several specific accusations, including that Mr. Boyd and his sons went to Israel to connect with Palestinian militants. Ms. Boyd said they were on a pilgrimage to see Islamic holy sites and immerse themselves in Arabic culture.

A neighbor, Susan Bedwell, said the reasons Ms. Boyd gave for her husband’s trips abroad were the same reasons she had given when the trips took place.

Ms. Boyd described Monday’s raid in detail. She said a man had come to the door wearing a shirt that appeared bloodied and told her that her husband and three of her sons had been in a serious car crash.

She went with the man to a nearby hospital, where another man dressed as a doctor came and out and asked if she was Ms. Boyd. He then handcuffed her, she said, and told her that he was an agent and that Mr. Boyd and two of her sons were being detained. Agents surrounded her, she said, and asked if she had weapons.

The ordeal was particularly harrowing, she said, because one of her sons, Luqman, died two years ago in a car accident at the age of 16.

Spokeswomen for the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Attorney’s Office in North Carolina’s Eastern District declined to comment on Ms. Boyd’s version of events.
Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Homeland Chief Offers Shift in Tone

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/us/politics/30security.html
July 30, 2009
Homeland Chief Offers Shift in Tone
By BRIAN KNOWLTON [Obama white house] [president Obama and national-security team][111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [fusion centers wherein US federal (interagency) and state law enforcement and the like cooperate] [also, these centers are suppose to integrate with global partner in allied countries] [DHS Secretary Napolitano] [bureaucracy: DHS, DoD, IC, state, others] [*]
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano called Wednesday for closer collaboration with foreign partners, more intensive cooperation between the federal government and local law enforcement officials, and greater involvement by civilians in watching for and responding to terrorist threats.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/us/politics/30security.html
July 30, 2009
Homeland Chief Offers Shift in Tone
By BRIAN KNOWLTON [Obama white house] [president Obama and national-security team][111th congress, 1st session] [bureaucracy] [fusion centers wherein US federal (interagency) and state law enforcement and the like cooperate] [also, these centers are suppose to integrate with global partner in allied countries] [DHS Secretary Napolitano] [bureaucracy: DHS, DoD, IC, state, others] [*]
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano called Wednesday for closer collaboration with foreign partners, more intensive cooperation between the federal government and local law enforcement officials, and greater involvement by civilians in watching for and responding to terrorist threats.

“For too long, we’ve treated the public as a liability to be protected rather than as an asset in our nation’s collective security,” Ms. Napolitano said in a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations in New York. “This approach, unfortunately, has allowed confusion, anxiety and fear to linger.” [*]

Ms. Napolitano, whose visit to New York included her first trip to ground zero, seemed intent in her speech on a shift of tone from that of the Bush administration, which critics say too often appeared to exaggerate threats and sow fear. But she unveiled no specific new initiatives in this regard. [obviously, these are the administration’s talking point and I think the time is probably right] [not that the threats are gone—they aren’t and the US is certain to get whacked again] [but the US must learn how to function with such threats ever present without violating its own hard-won principles] [*]

She did say she had traveled 30,000 miles in just the last few weeks — “from Islamabad to Seattle” — while brokering international security agreements.

And she emphasized the importance of facilities, called intelligence fusion centers, that have been set up nationwide to improve communications between the local officials most likely to see the first signs of suspicious activity — like a flight school student showing interest in learning to take off but not to land a plane — and state and federal officials. [*]

As governor of Arizona, Ms. Napolitano helped set up one of the early centers, where, she said, one might find an F.B.I. agent, a state highway patrol officer, immigration and drug enforcement agents, and perhaps even a tribal police officer. “They don’t merely share space,” she said. “They share databases and techniques.”

She also underscored her department’s efforts to strengthen ties with Arab-American, Muslim and South Asian communities across the country, in a quest to ease relations and share information.

She encouraged voluntary participation in local emergency preparedness programs and said it was important that Americans be educated on how to be more aware of terrorism risks. But she acknowledged that at present there was no educational program in place. [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Gates Speaks of Quicker Troop Decrease in Iraq

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072900963.html
Gates Speaks of Quicker Troop Decrease in Iraq
By Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [but mostly, SecDef Robert Gates] [just left –iraq several hours ago] [his impression, and it’s an important insight: the US might be able to withdwaw a little faster than scheduled, per SOFA] [the big even is the yearend elections; but some logistics and sundry others extras could probably be redeployed somewhat sooner than otherwise planned] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey, July 29 -- Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Wednesday that the relatively low levels of violence in Iraq and improved cooperation of late between U.S. and Iraqi forces have raised the possibility that commanders might be

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072900963.html
Gates Speaks of Quicker Troop Decrease in Iraq
By Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [but mostly, SecDef Robert Gates] [just left –iraq several hours ago] [his impression, and it’s an important insight: the US might be able to withdwaw a little faster than scheduled, per SOFA] [the big even is the yearend elections; but some logistics and sundry others extras could probably be redeployed somewhat sooner than otherwise planned] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey, July 29 -- Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Wednesday that the relatively low levels of violence in Iraq and improved cooperation of late between U.S. and Iraqi forces have raised the possibility that commanders might be able to "modestly accelerate" the reduction of U.S. forces this year.

At the same time, defense officials said, a flare-up between Kurds and Arabs in northern Iraq is the most likely scenario that could derail drawdown plans. Before leaving northern Iraq on Wednesday, Gates pressed Kurdish leaders to resolve their disputes with the Iraqi government in the next few months, while the United States still has tens of thousands of soldiers in the country and some influence over Baghdad.

U.S. forces formally pulled out of Iraqi cities June 30 and, although there has been some tension between U.S. and Iraqi forces in Baghdad, senior military officials said the transition to full Iraqi control of the cities has gone better than they had expected.

"There clearly will be the occasional hiccup by someone who doesn't get the word, but on the whole we are quite pleased," Gates said at the end of his two-day visit.

The latest evidence of how the Iraqi government is asserting its independence came Tuesday in Diyala province, when security forces raided the camp of an Iranian opposition group that in the past had been protected by the U.S. military in exchange for funneling information about Iran's nuclear ambitions.

At least eight Iranians were killed in the raid and in further violent clashes Wednesday, camp leaders and local officials said.

Gates said that if trends throughout Iraq remain generally positive, the United States could withdraw three combat brigades, each consisting of about 5,000 soldiers, from Iraq this year. The existing plans call for two brigades to be withdrawn.

Gen. Ray Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, would have to recommend speeding the pace of the withdrawal before any final decision could be made this fall, Gates said.

"I think there is at least some chance of a modest acceleration because of the way General Odierno sees things going, but that remains to be seen," he said.

Accelerating the withdrawal from Iraq, where about 130,000 U.S. troops are stationed, would take some of the pressure off the Army, which has been badly strained in recent years by the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. The U.S.-Iraqi security agreement calls for U.S. troop levels in Iraq to fall to about 50,000 by August 2010. All U.S. troops are to leave by the end of 2011.

Long-running territorial feuds between Arabs and Kurds in northern Iraq, particularly over the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, have erupted into tense standoffs between Kurdish militia fighters and Iraqi army soldiers. U.S. troops and liaison officers, who are embedded in the Kurdish and Iraqi units, have played a critical role in preventing violence.

"We have all sacrificed too much in blood and treasure to see our gains lost over political differences," Gates told Kurdish President Massoud Barzani during Wednesday's session.
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said Gates cautioned Barzani that "very difficult issues remain and that the clock is ticking on our presence."

Post a Comment© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Gates Sees Faster Iraq Troop Pullout

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30military.html
July 30, 2009
Gates Sees Faster Iraq Troop Pullout
By ELISABETH BUMILLER and PETER BAKER [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [but mostly, SecDef Robert Gates] [just left –iraq several hours ago] [his impression, and it’s an important insight: the US might be able to withdwaw a little faster than scheduled, per SOFA] [the big even is the yearend elections; but some logistics and sundry others extras could probably be redeployed somewhat sooner than otherwise planned] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Wednesday that the United States might accelerate the withdrawal of its forces from Iraq even as fresh tension there underscored worries about instability after the American troops are

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30military.html
July 30, 2009
Gates Sees Faster Iraq Troop Pullout
By ELISABETH BUMILLER and PETER BAKER [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [but mostly, SecDef Robert Gates] [just left –iraq several hours ago] [his impression, and it’s an important insight: the US might be able to withdwaw a little faster than scheduled, per SOFA] [the big even is the yearend elections; but some logistics and sundry others extras could probably be redeployed somewhat sooner than otherwise planned] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
INCIRLIK AIR BASE, Turkey — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Wednesday that the United States might accelerate the withdrawal of its forces from Iraq even as fresh tension there underscored worries about instability after the American troops are gone. [he knows what the rest of us do] [America’s presence has become an excuse not to make tough choices in –iraq] [those choices must be made and they must be made by –iraqis; putting said choices off in perpetuity simply keeps the US on the hook] [bad habits being reinforced time and again] [*]

Speaking with reporters after his latest visit to Baghdad, Mr. Gates said another brigade of about 5,000 troops could leave by the end of December on top of the two brigades, or 10,000 troops, now scheduled to pull out this year. [*]That would still leave the bulk of American forces in Iraq until after January’s elections.

The upbeat assessment came as flash points around Iraq offered cautionary notes about the country’s progress toward self-sustained security. While Mr. Gates met with his commanders, Iraqi forces made a surprise raid on a camp of Iranian exiles previously under American protection. A dispute between Baghdad and Kurdish leaders is intensifying, and the Shiite-led government has been arresting several Sunni militia leaders allied with the United States. [and America’s presence is as likely as not to exacerbate it rather than help it] [*]

Mr. Gates and other administration officials said such issues need to be addressed but did not cause them to rethink their current timetable for drawing down American forces. Instead, they expressed confidence that the month-old pullback from Iraqi cities had gone “better than expected,” as Mr. Gates put it, and indicated that, if anything, the American disengagement could proceed somewhat faster.

The Obama administration has made it clear that Iraq is not its war and that it is committed to withdrawal, but some analysts cautioned that officials have to pay attention to events in Iraq rather than focusing on an artificial calendar.

“I don’t think there’s anything in the cards for a slowdown,” Mr. Gates said during a stop in Turkey on Wednesday, a day after he had dinner in Baghdad with Gen. Ray Odierno, the top American commander in Iraq. “I think there’s at least some chance of a modest acceleration because of the way General Odierno sees things going. But that remains to be seen.” [*]

Mr. Gates cautioned that it was still early and that an accelerated troop drawdown “may or may not” occur. “I don’t want to put the general into a corner,” he said. Nonetheless, Mr. Gates said, General Odierno was “looking at all the possibilities, and he’s very encouraged.”

The fighting at the Iranian exile camp 60 miles north of Baghdad illustrated the shifting balance of power in Iraq as the Americans increasingly turn over responsibility to Iraqi security forces. Iraqi military and police units clashed with members of an Iranian opposition group for a second day on Wednesday as government forces sought to seize control of the camp, Camp Ashraf, which had been protected by American forces since 2003.

At least six people who lived in Camp Ashraf were killed during the assault, two of whom had been shot to death, according to the government and residents. General Odierno told reporters in Baghdad on Tuesday that the military did not know that the Iraqis were going to raid the camp, even though United States forces had guarded the camp until several months ago.

Iraqi officials blamed camp residents for the violence, saying security personnel had only fired their guns in the air during the assault but were met by a hail of stones and Molotov cocktails. “Our forces went to this camp in a peaceful way, but people threw rocks at them,” said Ali al-Dabbagh, a government spokesman.

Residents said security forces struck people with clubs and sprayed fire hoses as they entered the camp, and produced a video to back up their version of events. Dr. Hamid Gazayeri, a physician who lives at the camp, said its 50-bed hospital was filled with the injured. [see today’s and yesterday’s external for details on MEK-Iraqi fracas] [*]

“Our hospital is out of medicine and there is no place for the wounded,” Dr. Gazayeri said by telephone. “They are resting in every place we can put them.”

Camp Ashraf is home to about 3,400 people affiliated with the People’s Mujahedeen of Iran, an exile group committed to the overthrow of the Islamic revolutionary government in Tehran. They had been welcomed by Saddam Hussein in his war against Iran in the 1980s, but the current Iraqi government has closer relations with Iranian leaders and announced in December that it would shut the camp and evict its residents.

The United States [well, sort of: the state department does but other agencies don’t necessarily] [I certainly think it’s a terrorist group] [*] considers the group a terrorist organization for attacking Americans in the 1970s, but more recently members of the organization have supplied the United States with information about Iran’s nuclear program.

About 130,000 American troops remain in Iraq; most will stay to provide security through Iraqi elections in January. From March through August 2010, the Obama administration plan calls for a steep drawdown of some 80,000 troops, so that by the end of next summer only a residual force of 30,000 to 50,000 would still be in place until they too withdraw by the end of 2011.

Some Iraq specialists in Washington said that the current tensions were worrisome but that they should not affect the first stage of American troop withdrawals.

“There’s no one more conservative about withdrawing troops than the Pentagon,” said Douglas Ollivant, a former Iraq policy official at the White House. “If the Pentagon thinks, and Odierno concurs, that it’s time to withdraw troops, that’s a sign that it really is O.K. to withdraw troops.”

Frederick W. Kagan, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute who helped inspire President George W. Bush’s “surge” strategy, said Mr. Gates’s suggestion “doesn’t sound like a significant shift in the approach we were talking about already.” Mr. Kagan, who just returned from a visit to Iraq, said, “We’re on a path that makes sense.” [*]

Meghan O’Sullivan, who directed Iraq policy for Mr. Bush, agreed and said the more important concern was making sure that enough forces remained for a while after the elections, noting that it took five months for Iraq to form a government after its last elections, in 2005. [*]

American officials said they recognized they had to be flexible. Mr. Gates arrived in Turkey on Wednesday from Erbil, Iraq, where he met with Massoud Barzani, the president of the semiautonomous region of Kurdistan, in hopes of defusing an escalating dispute with the central government.

Kurdish leaders have moved forward with a new constitution that claims territory and oil and gas rights rejected by Baghdad. The differences were supposed to be settled in talks sponsored by the United Nations beginning in June, but the Kurdish Parliament passed the constitution anyway. [*]

Mr. Gates’s visit came as the Kurdistan regional government announced that Mr. Barzani had been re-elected in local polling, with the coalition of his Kurdistan Democratic Party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan winning 57 percent of the parliamentary vote. A coalition called Gorran won 24 percent.

Mr. Gates said he told Mr. Barzani that Kurdish leaders should take advantage of the Americans’ remaining time in Iraq and negotiate a settlement. He said he told Mr. Barzani that “we both have sacrificed too much in blood and treasure to see the gains of the last few years lost.” [good for Gates] [exactly what he should have reminded] [*]
Elisabeth Bumiller reported from Incirlik Air Base, Turkey, and Peter Baker from Washington. Reporting was contributed by Timothy Williams, Duraid Adnan and Mohammed Hussein from Baghdad, and Sam Dagher from Erbil, Iraq.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

U.S. Adviser’s Blunt Memo on Iraq: Time ‘to Go Home’

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31adviser.html
July 31, 2009
U.S. Adviser’s Blunt Memo on Iraq: Time ‘to Go Home’
By MICHAEL R. GORDON [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [-ir war, gsave-insurgency globally] [it’s become painfully clear: the –iraqis want the Americans over the horizon and out of the way where they can run their own show; but they also want enough American presence over the horizon that it will pull their chestnuts out of the fire if need be!] [that should be an unmistakable message to the US: it’s time to shut down the shop and make way for the residual force and new rules of engagment, ASAP] [followup] [cross in external] [*]
WASHINGTON — A senior American military adviser in Baghdad has concluded in an unusually blunt memo that the Iraqi forces suffer from deeply entrenched deficiencies but are now capable of protecting the Iraqi government, and that it is time “for the U.S.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31adviser.html
July 31, 2009
U.S. Adviser’s Blunt Memo on Iraq: Time ‘to Go Home’
By MICHAEL R. GORDON [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [mostly bureaucracy] [DoD, Pentagon, civlian advisers at Pentagon and back in White House and OEOB NSC staff and –iraq war czar staff] [-ir war, gsave-insurgency globally] [it’s become painfully clear: the –iraqis want the Americans over the horizon and out of the way where they can run their own show; but they also want enough American presence over the horizon that it will pull their chestnuts out of the fire if need be!] [that should be an unmistakable message to the US: it’s time to shut down the shop and make way for the residual force and new rules of engagment, ASAP] [followup] [cross in external] [*]
WASHINGTON — A senior American military adviser in Baghdad has concluded in an unusually blunt memo that the Iraqi forces suffer from deeply entrenched deficiencies but are now capable of protecting the Iraqi government, and that it is time “for the U.S. to declare victory and go home.” [go back to see how many times I wrote that same thing last year] [*]

Prepared by Col. Timothy R. Reese, [*]an adviser to the Iraqi military’s Baghdad command, the memorandum asserts that the Iraqi forces have an array of problems, including corruption, poor management and the inability to resist political pressure from Shiite political parties. [*]

For all of these problems, however, Colonel Reese argues that Iraqi forces are competent enough to hold off Sunni insurgents, Shiite militias and other internal threats to the Iraqi government. Extending the American military presence in Iraq beyond 2010, he argues, will do little to improve the Iraqis’ military performance while fueling a growing resentment. [bingo] [*]

“As the old saying goes, ‘Guests, like fish, begin to smell after three days.’ ” [*] Colonel Reese wrote. “Since the signing of the 2009 Security Agreement, we are guests in Iraq, and after six years in Iraq, we now smell bad to the Iraqi nose.”

A spokeswoman for Gen. Ray Odierno, the senior American commander in Iraq, said that the memo did not reflect the official stance of the United States military, was not intended for a broad audience, and that some of the problems the memo referred to had been solved since its writing in early July. [in other words, it was embarrassingly honest and frank and boy do we wish that hadn’t leaked] [*]

Referring to the Iraq Security Forces, the memo said: “The massive partnering efforts of U.S. combat forces with I.S.F. isn’t yielding benefits commensurate with the effort and is now generating its own opposition. We should declare our intentions to withdraw all U.S. military forces from Iraq by August 2010. This would not be a strategic paradigm shift, but an acceleration of existing U.S. plans by some 15 months.”

Before deploying to Iraq, Colonel Reese served as the director of the Combat Studies Institute at Fort Leavenworth, the Army’s premier intellectual center. He was an author of an official Army history of the Iraq war — “On Point II” — that was sharply critical of the lapses in postwar planning. [*]

Colonel Reese’s memo comes at a sensitive time in the Iraq conflict as American forces are gradually shifting to an advisory role. American combat troops moved out of Baghdad and other Iraqi cities last month, as required by the Status of Forces Agreement concluded by the United States and Iraq. [signed under the previous administration, let us be clear] [*]

Colonel Reese’s memo lists a number of problems that have emerged since the withdrawal. They include, he wrote, a “sudden coolness” to American advisers and the “forcible takeover” of a checkpoint in the Green Zone. Iraqi units, he added, are much less willing to conduct joint operations with their American counterparts “to go after targets the U.S. considers high value.”

The Iraqi Ground Forces Command, Colonel Reese wrote, has imposed “unilateral restrictions” on American military operations that “violate the most basic aspects” of American-Iraqi agreement.

“The Iraqi legal system in the Rusafa side of Baghdad has demonstrated a recent willingness to release individuals originally detained by the U.S. for attacks on the U.S.,” he added.

The spokeswoman for General Odierno, Lt. Col. Josslyn Aberle, responded in a e-mail to questions about the memo. “The e-mail was written by Col. Timothy Reese at the beginning of July and sent to selected personnel within Multi-National Division Baghdad on our classified e-mail system,” Colonel Aberle wrote. “It was expressed to a limited audience, and not meant for wider/general distribution.

“The e-mail reflects one person’s personal view at the time we were first implementing the Security Agreement post-30 June. It does not reflect the official views of U.S. Forces in Iraq. Since that time many of the initial issues have been resolved and our partnerships with Iraqi Security Forces and G.O.I. partners now are even stronger than before 30 June.” G.O.I. is the abbreviation for Government of Iraq.

Under the plan developed by General Odierno, the vast majority of the approximately 130,000 American forces in Iraq will remain through Iraq’s national elections, which are expected to be held next January. After the elections and the formation of a new Iraqi government, there will be rapid reduction [it would be better if many of those backup forces began redeploying earlier] [*] in American forces. By the end of August 2010, the United States would have no more than 50,000 troops in Iraq, which would include six brigades whose primary role would be to advise and train Iraqi troops.

Some experts, such as Stephen Biddle, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former adviser to General David H. Petraeus, have argued that this timetable may be too fast given the host of remaining problems in Iraq, including differences between Kurds and Arab leaders, remaining Sunni-Shiite tensions and the possibility that the government of Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki might become more authoritarian. [on the contrary, the longer the US lingers the longer they will take to make tough choices] [*]

“Renewed violence in Iraq is not inevitable, but it is a serious risk,” Mr. Biddle wrote in a recent paper. “A vigorous preventive strategy is clearly preferable, therefore. The most effective option for prevention is to go slow in drawing down the U.S. military presence in Iraq. Measures to maximize U.S. leverage on important Iraqi leaders — especially Maliki — can be helpful in steering Iraqis away from confrontation and violence, but U.S. leverage is a function of U.S. presence.”

During his recent appearance in Washington, Mr. Maliki also appeared to be contemplating a possible role for American forces after the December 2011 deadline for the removal of all American troops under the Status of Forces Agreement.

The Iraqi prime minister noted in an appearance at the United States Institute of Peace, a Washington-based research organization, that the Status of Forces Agreement, would “end” the American military presence in his country in 2011. “Nevertheless, if Iraqi forces required further training and further support, we shall examine this at that time based on the needs of Iraq,” he said.

During his visit to Iraq earlier this week, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates indicated that might be a “modest acceleration” the number of American forces that are withdrawn from Iraq this year. At the same time, Pentagon and military officials indicated that Kurdish-Arab friction remains a serious worry and that the American advisory role is still very important. [the US cannot solve that problem and the –iraqis keep waiting for the US to do it so long as the US keeps hanging around] [bad habits are being formed that cannot possibly work to either –Iraq or the US benefit] [*]

But Colonel Reese questioned the value of an extended advisory role.

“If there ever was a window where the seeds of a professional military culture could have been implanted, it is now long past. U.S. combat forces will not be here long enough or with sufficient influence to change it,” he wrote. “The military culture of the Baathist-Soviet model under Saddam Hussein remains entrenched and will not change. The senior leadership of the I.S.F. is incapable of change in the current environment.” [*]
Colonel Reese appears to have anonymously circulated a less colorful version of his memo on a blog dubbed “The Enchanter’s Corner.” The author is described as an active-duty Army officer serving as an adviser in Iraq who is “passionate about political issues.” Since word of the memo began to spread, the memo has been removed from the site.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

No Unguarded Moment

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902627.html
No Unguarded Moment
It's Time to Scale Back the Security Mania
By David Ignatius
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [the several years now of over-the-top security practices] [it’s well past time to ease into some sort of reasonable in-between the old do virtually nothing and the post-9/11 era of defer everything absolutely to the president] [use psci355, 469b] [*]
It was an unsettling image: Arrayed in front of the neighborhood barbershop last week were four burly men with the characteristic earpieces and bulky suits that marked them as security officers. Inside, gracing the barber's chair, was the well-trimmed director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Robert Mueller.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902627.html
No Unguarded Moment
It's Time to Scale Back the Security Mania
By David Ignatius
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [the several years now of over-the-top security practices] [it’s well past time to ease into some sort of reasonable in-between the old do virtually nothing and the post-9/11 era of defer everything absolutely to the president] [use psci355, 469b] [*]
It was an unsettling image: Arrayed in front of the neighborhood barbershop last week were four burly men with the characteristic earpieces and bulky suits that marked them as security officers. Inside, gracing the barber's chair, was the well-trimmed director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Robert Mueller.

Perhaps in today's Washington, the FBI director truly needs a security detail to protect him when he gets a haircut. But I wonder. [*] [my question is how does Mueller enjoy that sort of “protection?”] [*] From my vantage, the blatant obviousness of his bodyguards only called attention to him. At the grocery store across the street, he was the talk of the checkout line. "Who's over at the barbershop?" "The FBI guy, what's-his-name." "No way!" People were coming out just to look. [I would think that he’s want some security for his family and property that did not especially stand out but that anybody planning to do his family harm would quickly realize was serious security] [apart from that, I doubt FBI director enjoys being constantly followed everywhere by obvious body guards] [*]

Protecting our public servants is important, to be sure. But we have gotten so cranked up about security in the United States that senior officials travel in cocoons, as if they are under constant threat. Every Cabinet secretary seems to have a security detail; so do governors and mayors and prominent legislators.

What are all these security folks protecting our officials from? Al-Qaeda? Hezbollah? Crazy people? Aggrieved constituents? Or is it something more ephemeral -- a nameless, pervasive sense of danger that may suddenly assault the secretary of energy or the governor of New Jersey? [*]

What I encountered at the local barbershop was a small example of the general security mania that seized the country after Sept. 11, 2001. So here's a suggestion: This September, as we mark the eighth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, let's resolve to dial the paranoia meter back a notch. [excellent idea] [I do wonder what will happen, though, when the next attack eventually comes?] [I worry about the overreaction then] [*]

The hyper-security has added as much to public fear (and annoyance) as to public safety. The Transportation Security Administration is so pervasive at airports that we forget how bizarre it is to see old ladies and pregnant mothers and 8-year-old kids frisked and searched as if they had just arrived from Waziristan. Does this really make sense?

The security culture has its own momentum, wiping away other values, such as openness or privacy. These days, you can't get into any self-respecting building in Washington, public or private, without showing identification and signing a visitors' log. [*] When I went to give a talk at the National Defense University last week, it was like entering the Green Zone in Baghdad. They made me open the trunk, the hood and all four doors of my car -- and that was after my license plate number had been cleared in advance.

The Secret Service has the most difficult security job in Washington -- and the most visible. You can hear the roar of the sirens each evening as the enormous motorcade of a dozen cars and a half-dozen motorcycles conveys the vice president to his residence on Massachusetts Avenue. Maybe it's necessary to have so many cars, but it's a scene, frankly, that reminds me of Moscow during the Soviet days. [don’t be so dismissive] [when’s the last time you were in Russia?] [it’s the symbol of wealthy oligarch in St Petersburg to have cops shut down streets with the oligarch’s motorcade romping through—summer 2008 we saw it time and again] [and the comments, rather sardonic almost to the comment, were whether it was an oligarch of the major, something along those lines] [*]

The Secret Service must deal with a reported 3,000 threats a year against the president. And al-Qaeda aside, there are a lot of nut jobs out there who might like to harm the president and his family. That said, Secret Service officers can be among the rudest people in Washington. A White House chief of staff confided several years ago that he discovered their unfriendliness when he was stopped without his badge one day by an officer who didn't recognize him.

A few Secret Service personnel also seem to think that leaking embarrassing personal details about the president and his family is part of the assignment. (See the gossip-filled new book by Ron Kessler, "In the President's Secret Service," for leaks about the Bushes and the Obamas.)

Making trade-offs isn't easy when it comes to security. But surely we have reached the point of diminishing returns with the fortress mentality. The truth is, we all must live with vulnerability. It's a part of modern life. We need to take reasonable precautions, yes. But it would be good for our public officials to step out of the bubble occasionally and smell the roses -- unfiltered by the security detail.
The next haircut is on me, Mr. Mueller, and if your security detail doesn't object, I'll show you around the neighborhood.
davidignatius@washpost.com
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Tough on Israel

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903167.html
Tough on Israel
Why President Obama's battle against Jewish settlements could prove self-defeating
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [editorial] [apparently the conventional wisdom?? that President Obama is being hard on Israel by saying no settlement agreements actually mean what we all thought they meant when they were agreed to?] [use psci355] [*]
ONE OF THE MORE striking results of the Obama administration's first six months is that only one country has worse relations with the United States than it did in January: Israel. The new administration has pushed a reset button with Russia and sent new ambassadors to Syria and Venezuela; it has offered olive branches to Cuba and Burma. But for nearly three months it has been locked in a public confrontation with Israel over Jewish housing construction in Jerusalem and the West Bank. [really?] [it hardly looks like a locked, public confrontation to me] [and it most certainly does not look like it’s between President Obama and Israel] what ever it is, it’s between President Obama and Likud’s Bibi Netanyahu] [*] To a less visible extent, the two governments also have

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903167.html
Tough on Israel
Why President Obama's battle against Jewish settlements could prove self-defeating
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [editorial] [apparently the conventional wisdom?? that President Obama is being hard on Israel by saying no settlement agreements actually mean what we all thought they meant when they were agreed to?] [use psci355] [*]
ONE OF THE MORE striking results of the Obama administration's first six months is that only one country has worse relations with the United States than it did in January: Israel. The new administration has pushed a reset button with Russia and sent new ambassadors to Syria and Venezuela; it has offered olive branches to Cuba and Burma. But for nearly three months it has been locked in a public confrontation with Israel over Jewish housing construction in Jerusalem and the West Bank. [really?] [it hardly looks like a locked, public confrontation to me] [and it most certainly does not look like it’s between President Obama and Israel] what ever it is, it’s between President Obama and Likud’s Bibi Netanyahu] [*] To a less visible extent, the two governments also have differed over policy toward Iran.

This week a parade of senior U.S. officials has been visiting Jerusalem to tackle the issues: Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Middle East envoy George J. Mitchell, national security adviser James L. Jones and senior aide Dennis Ross. But the tensions persist, and public opinion is following: The Pew Global Attitudes Project reported last week that Israel was the only country among 25 surveyed where the public's image of the United States was getting worse rather than better. [stunning] [if we go back and see what transpired between Clinton and Netanyahu it was far more acrimonious than this] [why did no one call it serious confrontation?] [*]

In part the trouble was unavoidable: Taking office with a commitment to pursuing Middle East peace, Mr. Obama faced a new, right-wing Israeli government whose prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, has refused to accept the goal of Palestinian statehood. In part it was tactical: By making plain his disagreements with Mr. Netanyahu on statehood and Jewish settlements, Mr. Obama hoped to force an Israeli retreat while building credibility with Arab governments -- two advances that he arguably needs to set the stage for a serious peace process.

But the administration also is guilty of missteps. Rather than pocketing Mr. Netanyahu's initial concessions -- he gave a speech on Palestinian statehood and suggested parameters for curtailing settlements accepted by previous U.S. administrations -- Mr. Obama chose to insist on an absolutist demand for a settlement "freeze." [oh, so when previous administrations make deal comprised of winks and nods where nobody write anything down so it’s got the patina of plausible deniability, and the new guy says, “wait, that’s no way to do buiness” the new guy is insisting on absolutist demands??] [*] Palestinian and Arab leaders who had accepted previous compromises immediately hardened their positions; they also balked at delivering the "confidence-building" concessions to Israel that the administration seeks. Israeli public opinion, which normally leans against the settler movement, has rallied behind Mr. Netanyahu. And Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, which were active during the Bush administration's final year, have yet to resume.

U.S. and Israeli officials are working on a compromise that would allow Israel to complete some housing now under construction while freezing new starts for a defined period. Arab states would be expected to take steps in return. Such a deal will expose Mr. Obama to criticism in the Arab world -- a public relations hit that he could have avoided had he not escalated the settlements dispute in the first place. At worst, the president may find himself diminished among both Israelis and Arabs before discussions even begin on the issues on which U.S. clout is most needed. If he is to be effective in brokering a peace deal, Mr. Obama will need to show both sides that they can trust him -- and he must be tough on more than one country. [so long as Bibi has editorial boards doing his heavy lifting for him, he won’t have to concede anything] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

The Military Is Not the Police

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/opinion/30thu1.html
July 30, 2009
Editorial
The Military Is Not the Police
[editorial] [disturbing report a week or so back of the Bush administration’s brainstorm over sending military into Lakawana NY for the “Lakawana 6” even though the FBI was all over it] [reportedly veep Cheney argued hard for it, despite Bill of Rights, rule of law, posse comitatus, and the rest] [irony: President Bush put on the kybosh] [*]
It was disturbing to learn the other day just how close the last administration came to violating laws barring the military from engaging in law enforcement when President George W. Bush considered sending troops into a Buffalo suburb in 2002 to arrest terrorism suspects. Unfortunately, this is not necessarily a problem of the past. More needs to be done to ensure that the military is not illegally deployed in this country. [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/opinion/30thu1.html
July 30, 2009
Editorial
The Military Is Not the Police
[editorial] [disturbing report a week or so back of the Bush administration’s brainstorm over sending military into Lakawana NY for the “Lakawana 6” even though the FBI was all over it] [reportedly veep Cheney argued hard for it, despite Bill of Rights, rule of law, posse comitatus, and the rest] [irony: President Bush put on the kybosh] [*]
It was disturbing to learn the other day just how close the last administration came to violating laws barring the military from engaging in law enforcement when President George W. Bush considered sending troops into a Buffalo suburb in 2002 to arrest terrorism suspects. Unfortunately, this is not necessarily a problem of the past. More needs to be done to ensure that the military is not illegally deployed in this country. [*]

The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 generally prohibits the military from law enforcement activities within the United States. If armed officers are going to knock on Americans’ doors, or arrest them in the streets, they should answer to civilian authorities. [*]

Despite this bedrock principle, The Times’s Mark Mazzetti and David Johnston reported last week, top Bush administration officials, including (no surprise) Vice President Dick Cheney, argued that the president had the authority to use the military to round up a suspected terrorist cell known as the Lackawanna Six. [*]

Mr. Cheney and others cited a legal memorandum co-written by John C. Yoo (author of the infamous torture memo), which made the baseless claim that the military can go after accused Al Qaeda terrorists on United States soil because it would be a matter of national security, [it’s effectively the same as saying since police activities are part of the US occupation of –Iraq, the military cannot have MPs but must use police departments sent out into the field with their distinct chains of command!] [*] not law enforcement.

The Lackawanna Six controversy is history, but there are troubling signs the military may be injecting itself today into law enforcement. The American Civil Liberties Union has been sounding the alarm about the proliferation of “fusion centers,” in which federal, state and local law enforcement cooperate on anti-terrorism work. According to the A.C.L.U., the lines have blurred, and the centers have involved military personnel in domestic law enforcement. Congress should investigate.

Janet Napolitano, the homeland security secretary, said Wednesday that fusion centers were not intended to have a military presence, and that she was not aware of ones that did. She promised greater transparency about what role, if any, the active military was playing. [*]

Civil libertarians are also raising questions about a program known as the Chemical, Biological, Radiological/Nuclear and High-Yield Explosives Consequence Management Response Force. The Army says its aim is to have active-duty troops ready to back up local law enforcement in catastrophic situations, like an attack with a nuclear weapon. That could be legal, but the workings of these units are murky. Again, Congress should ensure that the military is not moving into prohibited areas.

Some of the military’s line-crossing seems ad hoc. Earlier this year, when a man in a small town in Alabama went on a shooting spree, Army troops reportedly went out on the streets to participate in the law enforcement effort. It is still unclear precisely what role they played. It is important that the military be thoroughly trained on what the law does and does not permit. [*]

After the lack of respect for posse comitatus at the highest ranks of the previous administration, the Obama White House and Congress must ensure that the lines between military and law enforcement have been restored, clearly, and that they are respected. [this all stems from the same misguided interpretation of the commander in chief clause as plenary power: unitary theory of executive’s war power prerogatives] [**]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Buenos Aires Journal

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30argentina.html
July 30, 2009
Buenos Aires Journal
Lost in an Abyss of Drugs, and Entangled by Poverty
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO [Brazi] [one of the rare core (almost) states in region] [SAmerica] [Brazil considerable urbanization problems] [use psci350] [use ir text] [followup] [common cycle where kids leave the farms for big cities expecting so much more that family farm offered whereupon they fall into serious funk followed by degredation while family farms completely ruined] [*]
BUENOS AIRES — The homecoming did not go as Pablo Eche had dreamed.
After 15 months in a rehabilitation clinic battling his addiction to paco, a highly addictive drug that has laid waste to thousands of lives in this country, Mr. Eche returned to Ciudad Oculta, a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of this city.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30argentina.html
July 30, 2009
Buenos Aires Journal
Lost in an Abyss of Drugs, and Entangled by Poverty
By ALEXEI BARRIONUEVO [Brazi] [one of the rare core (almost) states in region] [SAmerica] [Brazil considerable urbanization problems] [use psci350] [use ir text] [followup] [common cycle where kids leave the farms for big cities expecting so much more that family farm offered whereupon they fall into serious funk followed by degredation while family farms completely ruined] [*]
BUENOS AIRES — The homecoming did not go as Pablo Eche had dreamed.
After 15 months in a rehabilitation clinic battling his addiction to paco, a highly addictive drug that has laid waste to thousands of lives in this country, Mr. Eche returned to Ciudad Oculta, a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of this city.

Family members, including his mother, Bilma Acuña, an anti-paco community advocate, welcomed him back last October.

But their love was not enough. Within weeks, overcome by depression over his failure to find a job that could support his son and daughter, he once again turned to the drug for solace.

Barefoot and shirtless, his ribs poking out of his thin torso, he shuffled about in red soccer shorts in the diner with a bare concrete floor run by his family.

“This is what keeps me company now,” Mr. Eche, his eyes darting around nervously, said of the drug. Paco “doesn’t demand anything of me.” [*]

“It doesn’t promise me anything, nothing at all.”

For more than five years Mr. Eche has been a slave to paco, a smokable drug made from bits of cocaine residue mixed with industrial solvents and kerosene or rat poison. Labeled “the scourge of the poor” by politicians, the drug has become the greatest social challenge facing shantytowns like Oculta. [what a name—it’s beyond hope from the name on] [in effective the label of ancient cartographers: beyond here be monsters] [*]

In late 2007, when this reporter first visited Mr. Eche in the rehabilitation clinic, he spoke with clear eyes about the dangers of paco. He gracefully related his dreams to conquer his addiction, get a job and buy another house, after he had destroyed his last one and sold off the land to support his drug habit.

But back in Oculta, Mr. Eche, 27, was once again living like a vampire, avoiding daylight while venturing out at night in search of paco’s quick but intense highs. His dangerous lifestyle brought him into conflict with the police, and he escaped jail only by checking into a psychiatric hospital in late May.

Mr. Eche’s mother helped form Mothers Against Paco, which tries to save young people from falling prey to the drug. Her eyes cloud with sadness when she talks about her son.

“He has a lot of hate,” said Mrs. Acuña, 48. “Every time he comes out of treatment it is worse because he has nothing, no work. There is nothing for him to do.”

The majority of paco users go back to consuming after spending a year or two in treatment, she said. “They return with nothing, to the same place that made them sick.”

When Mr. Eche came back to Oculta, his mother and stepfather helped him find work at a community center for troubled children. But the salary was less than $30 a week, half the amount he had expected. The thought of trying to support his family on the modest sum sent the fragile Mr. Eche back into the abyss, back to paco, his mother said.

Ciudad Oculta sprouted in the 1950s, part of a wave of immigration from the countryside to the newly industrialized Buenos Aires. Argentina’s 2001 economic crisis deepened the bleak outlook for Oculta’s residents, said Jorge Tasín, who published a book about the shantytown in 2007. [the cottage industries that accompany urbanization] [*]

Paco began arriving in 2003 as a cheaper alternative to snortable cocaine once Argentina became a destination for the final processing of cocaine flowing in from Bolivia and Peru. The growing supplies of leftover cocaine residue made creating paco fast and cheap. It sells on the street for as little as $1.30 a dose.

Even before he tried paco, Mr. Eche was troubled. In 2001, his 16-year-old brother David was shot dead by drug bandits after he witnessed a killing in Oculta. Six days later, Mr. Eche was admitted to a psychiatric hospital for post-traumatic stress.

Then in late 2003, he tried paco from a street dealer in Oculta. He was hooked. His brother Leandro also began using the drug, although Mrs. Acuña considers his addiction less severe.

Residents in Oculta say they do not trust local police officers, believing that many are involved in the drug trade. So the Mothers Against Paco turned to a federal judge, Sergio G. Torres, who ordered a series of raids by the federal police to root out dealers. [certain that some of them are] [*]

Since the operation began in late March, the police have conducted 25 raids in Ciudad Oculta, detained 19 people and seized the equivalent of more than 80,000 doses of paco, Judge Torres said. Investigators have found that in many cases paco is being marketed not by big-time dealers but by family enterprises in which women cook up the drugs in home kitchens.

Paco averages only 10 percent cocaine, with the rest being highly toxic substances, the judge said. “Doctors we have consulted say nerve cells and brain cells start dying soon after consumption begins,” he said.

Paco also wreaks havoc on the appetites of users, who literally die from not eating, Judge Torres said. The drug is so new there is no clear treatment protocol to break the addiction, he said.

Mr. Eche was wasting away before his mother’s eyes in late May when the police picked him up for suspected paco possession. Mrs. Acuña intervened and got a judge to drop the criminal case on the condition that she would check him into yet another psychiatric hospital.

On June 14, Mr. Eche’s birthday, the family surprised him at the hospital. They ate cake on a patio with an unexpected visitor — Mr. Eche’s son, Enzo, 5, who was granted special permission to enter the hospital. Mr. Eche began crying when Enzo ran into his arms, Mrs. Acuña said.

She is thankful for small blessings. With swine flu raging through Buenos Aires, Mr. Eche’s stay at the hospital has kept him from sleeping on the streets and being at greater risk of catching the virus, she said.

In another month, Mr. Eche will have to leave the hospital. His mother said she hoped to get him into yet another treatment center, this one run by a church. “I have to have faith that he will recover,” she said. “I will raise my hopes yet again.” [*]

Beyond the police raids, Mrs. Acuña said, politicians need to get to the root of what is causing paco’s spread. Oculta’s residents are starving for jobs with decent salaries to help break the cycle of hopelessness that is creating whole families of paco addicts and dealers, she said.

She and her husband said they hoped to find the money to turn the upper floor of their diner into an integrated drug-prevention center employing psychologists and professional counselors.
Ultimately, only Oculta can save itself, Mrs. Acuña said.
“This is really up to us.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Honduran Leader Backs Return of President

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30honduras.html
July 30, 2009
Honduran Leader Backs Return of President
By GINGER THOMPSON [Honduras] [Central America] [banana republic behavior?] [another military coup situation?] [not clear] [Latin America] [bizaare standoff with poor campesinos supportive of overthrown president and middle-to-upper middle class and above awkwardly behind extraconstitutional means] [followup] [*]
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — The head of Honduras’s de facto government, Roberto Micheletti, has expressed support for a compromise that would allow the ousted president of his country to return to power, [*]according to officials in the de facto government and diplomats from the region.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30honduras.html
July 30, 2009
Honduran Leader Backs Return of President
By GINGER THOMPSON [Honduras] [Central America] [banana republic behavior?] [another military coup situation?] [not clear] [Latin America] [bizaare standoff with poor campesinos supportive of overthrown president and middle-to-upper middle class and above awkwardly behind extraconstitutional means] [followup] [*]
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — The head of Honduras’s de facto government, Roberto Micheletti, has expressed support for a compromise that would allow the ousted president of his country to return to power, [*]according to officials in the de facto government and diplomats from the region.

But the nation is so polarized over the possible return that Mr. Micheletti is reaching out to other regional leaders for help in building support for such a deal, especially among the country’s elite, the officials said.

Mr. Micheletti has repeatedly refused to consider the reinstatement of the ousted president, Manuel Zelaya. But on Wednesday, the officials said, Mr. Micheletti called President Óscar Arias of Costa Rica, who has tried to mediate a diplomatic solution to the Honduran political crisis, to express his support for a plan Mr. Arias presented. The 12-point plan, known as the San José Accord, would allow Mr. Zelaya to return as president, although with significantly limited powers. [*]

The officials said Mr. Micheletti warned President Arias that he had not been able to persuade other parts of the Honduran government, or the leaders of the Honduran business community, to go along with the proposal. So he asked Mr. Arias to consider sending a prominent international political figure to help him stem the fierce opposition.

Mr. Micheletti confirmed Wednesday night in a statement that he had asked Mr. Arias to send an international envoy.

One of those whom officials mentioned as a possibility was Enrique V. Iglesias, a former president of the Inter-American Development Bank.

“Today is an important day,” said one of the officials who spoke about Mr. Micheletti’s call to Mr. Arias. “President Arias essentially has Mr. Micheletti calling to say he thinks the San José Accord is a good framework, but that to make the accord work, he needs help building political support inside the country.”

Another official who confirmed the call echoed that sentiment, saying, “This is good news.”

The officials requested anonymity because of the delicacy of the negotiations.

The call from Mr. Micheletti came one day after the United States increased pressure on the de facto Honduran government by withdrawing diplomatic visas from four high-level officials, and as members of the Honduran Congress began their own examination of Mr. Arias’s proposal. [*]

The call was the clearest signal yet that Mr. Micheletti might not be primarily responsible for the stalemate. Diplomats close to the negotiations said there was broad opposition to Mr. Zelaya’s return, led by some of the most powerful political and business leaders in Honduras.

Those leaders have felt misunderstood — some would say betrayed — by the international community’s condemnation of last month’s ouster of Mr. Zelaya, whom they accuse of illegally trying to change the Constitution to extend his time in power.

Honduran lawmakers and the Supreme Court have said that it was a mistake for the military to have forced Mr. Zelaya into exile, but that the accusations against him are valid. And they argue that the only way he should be allowed back is to face trial.

According to Mr. Arias’s proposal, Mr. Zelaya would be allowed to finish his term, which ends in January, although elections would be moved up by one month. Mr. Zelaya would also be exempt from prosecution until after leaving office.

None of those points seemed acceptable to members of the Honduran Congress who were huddled all Wednesday to consider the Arias proposal. “Impunity should not exist in this country,” said Congressman Antonio C. Rivera. “No one is above the law.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Colombia: Chávez’s Ire Is Not Reciprocated

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30briefs-Colombiabrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Colombia: Chávez’s Ire Is Not Reciprocated
By REUTERS [Colombia] [bogota] [Colombia-Venezuela relations] [improved over past few years but over the past 12-18 months a series of incidents with Colombia’s * seen leaning toward Washington while Venezuela is Venezula (Chavez)] [use psci350] [if Hugo has allowed his government or, even groups that his government should have corralled, to transship armaments to FARC] [followup] [*]
Colombia said Wednesday that it would try to keep trade flowing with Venezuela, its No. 2 export market, a day after the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, said he would

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/americas/30briefs-Colombiabrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Colombia: Chávez’s Ire Is Not Reciprocated
By REUTERS [Colombia] [bogota] [Colombia-Venezuela relations] [improved over past few years but over the past 12-18 months a series of incidents with Colombia’s * seen leaning toward Washington while Venezuela is Venezula (Chavez)] [use psci350] [if Hugo has allowed his government or, even groups that his government should have corralled, to transship armaments to FARC] [followup] [*]
Colombia said Wednesday that it would try to keep trade flowing with Venezuela, its No. 2 export market, a day after the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chávez, said he would withdraw his ambassador from Bogotá and halt trade with Colombia. Mr. Chávez’s statements capped days of tensions over allegations that Venezuela shipped rockets to Marxist Colombian rebels; Venezuela denies the allegations.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Chinese Workers Say Illness Is Real, Not Hysteria

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30jilin.html
July 30, 2009
Chinese Workers Say Illness Is Real, Not Hysteria
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story—here it’s that the workers are hysterical, to create something that points dramatically away from state-Party culpability!] [*]
JILIN CITY, China — Tian Lihua was just beginning her morning shift when she felt a wave of nausea, then numbness in her limbs and finally dizziness that gave way to unconsciousness. In the days that followed, more than 1,200 fellow employees at the textile mill [*] where Ms. Tian works would be felled by these and other symptoms, including convulsions, breathing difficulties, vomiting and temporary paralysis. [some of

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30jilin.html
July 30, 2009
Chinese Workers Say Illness Is Real, Not Hysteria
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [NEAsia] [the workers’-proletariat’s paradise that China is] [industrial accident?] [use psci350] [use ir text] [in something like this where it’s unclear and the Party may not know quite what to make of things, the first impulse is to fabricated a cover story—here it’s that the workers are hysterical, to create something that points dramatically away from state-Party culpability!] [*]
JILIN CITY, China — Tian Lihua was just beginning her morning shift when she felt a wave of nausea, then numbness in her limbs and finally dizziness that gave way to unconsciousness. In the days that followed, more than 1,200 fellow employees at the textile mill [*] where Ms. Tian works would be felled by these and other symptoms, including convulsions, breathing difficulties, vomiting and temporary paralysis. [some of these are difficult to explain away while others are easy] [*]

“When I finally came to, I could hear the doctors talking but I couldn’t open my eyes,” she said weakly from a hospital bed last month. “They said I had a reaction to unknown substances.”

Ms. Tian and scores of other workers say the “unknown substances” came from a factory across the street that produces aniline, a highly toxic chemical used in the manufacture of polyurethane, rubber, herbicides and dyes. [*]

As soon as the Jilin Connell Chemical Plant started production this spring, local hospitals began receiving stricken workers from the acrylic yarn factory 100 yards downwind from Connell’s exhaust stacks. On some days, doctors were overwhelmed and patients were put two to a bed. [uhm, that seems to be indicative of some sort of problem that the state would want to remedy for its own peace of mind] [let’s assume the Party is right, for the sake of argument] [minimally, it would still want to build some hood device that fools highly impressionable people into thinking the trouble had been addressed] [in some places that would be verboten as it would be tacit admission of fault but in China where there are no liability lawyers, what the big deal?] [*]

A clear case of chemical contamination? Not so, say Chinese health officials who contend that the episode is a communal outbreak of psychogenic illness, also called mass hysteria. The blurry vision, muscle spasms and pounding headaches, according to a government report issued in May, were simply psychological reactions to a feared chemical exposure.

During a four-day visit, a team of public health experts from Beijing talked to doctors, looked at blood tests and then advised bedridden workers to “get a hold of their emotions,” according to patients and their families. [I imagine some blood screening would turn up a culprit compound or two] [*]

Western medical experts say fear of poisoning can lead people to describe symptoms that exist mainly in their minds. But outbreaks of psychogenic illnesses on the scale of what has been reported in Jilin are rare, they say. [but with earthquakes and similar natural disasters fresh in peoples minds demonstrating the govt’s poor record, mass psuchogenic illnss becomes more likely] [*]

The official diagnosis has done little to ease anxieties in Jilin, an industrial city in northeast China where verdant low-rise mountains form a backdrop to a thicket of smokestacks. More than two months since the health complaints began, at least two dozen people remain hospitalized, and many others insist that they are suffering from toxic poisoning. Local residents say the “mass hysteria” verdict is an attempt to cover up malfeasance.

“How could a psychological illness cause so much pain and misery?” said Zhang Fusheng, a 29-year-old textile worker, gasping as he lay tethered to an oxygen line in the hospital, his limbs seized up and his eyes darting back and forth. “My only wish is to get better so I can go back to work and take care of my family.”

In May more than 1,000 residents blocked railroad tracks in the city for hours to draw attention to the sick workers. Their ire intensified after the State Administration of Work Safety posted a statement on its Web site describing the problem as a “chemical leak” and advising other companies to learn from Connell Chemical’s mistake. After a few hours, however, the statement had been removed. [*]

“We are simply laboratory mice in Connell’s chemical experiment,” said Xie Shaofeng, 34, a textile worker whose wife remains hospitalized.

The episode comes at a time of rising environmental degradation in China brought on by decades of heady growth and lax pollution controls. Although many people here have long lived with sullied air and water, they are increasingly aware of the toll that they take on human health and are demanding greater restrictions on noxious industries. [even China is going to have to address these things] [given facts, the Party may want to get out in front of some of the global commons issues with a view toward some positive blowback on domestic matters] [*]

Fear of contamination was heightened last fall after the government acknowledged that thousands of children had been made ill by milk adulterated with melamine, an ingredient used in the manufacture of plastics.

The Ministry of Health in Beijing declined to provide details of their findings in Jilin, but according to local officials, investigators found no evidence of organ damage that would point to chemical exposure. They added that those claiming to be sick had been in different parts of the sprawling textile factory and offered inconsistent descriptions of the odor of what they said caused their symptoms.

Although they say those who fell ill in Jilin could have been poisoned, psychogenic experts outside China say it is also possible for some to have been affected by toxic fumes while others exhibited psychosomatic illnesses set off by real poisonings.

Robert E. Bartholomew, a sociologist at the International University College of Technology in Malaysia, said the government’s handling of the episode, including the ban on reports in the news media, might be fueling paranoia. “The best way to handle psychogenic illness is to be open and transparent, which tends to dissipate concerns,” said Mr. Bartholomew, [indeed] [*]a co-author of “Outbreak! The Encyclopedia of Extraordinary Social Behavior.” If it is indeed a case of mass hysteria, he said, it would be the largest instance of workplace psychogenic illness on record.

The episode is not Jilin’s first experience with the perils of aniline. In 2005, an explosion at another factory that produced the volatile substance killed eight people and sent 100 tons of deadly benzene and nitrobenzene into the Songhua River, tainting drinking water for millions of people downstream. [there you go] [*]

Public anxiety was high even before the new $125 million aniline plant opened in early April. During a test run last September, two security guards standing in front of the textile plant were overcome by fumes. Connell paid them compensation, although it is unclear what adjustments were made to the manufacturing process and, more important, the venting of its airborne byproducts, a mix of carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide and nitrogen oxide.

Shortly after production began, Li Hongwei, a 34-year-old Connell worker, collapsed and died on the job. Although rumors suggested that he had been poisoned, factory officials insist that Mr. Li succumbed to a heart attack. His family, which received a compensation package that included a job for his wife and a monthly $200 stipend for his mother and son, declined to talk to reporters.

After Mr. Li’s death, the authorities forced Connell to halt production for a month. But in early June, not long after it resumed, Wang Shulin, a 38-year-old technician at the textile mill, went into convulsions while on the job. He was sent to the hospital but died just as doctors were administering a CT scan, according to co-workers. The cause of death was a brain hemorrhage.

Factory officials insist that Mr. Wang’s death had nothing to do with chemical exposure.

Such assurances have done little to quiet fears that Connell continues to taint the air. Li Jingfeng, 35, an electrician at an ethanol plant that abuts the aniline plant, said chemical detectors at his factory had gone off five or six times in the last month, forcing workers to evacuate. “Everyone is nervous about what’s coming out of that place,” he said.

Those who continue to insist that they were poisoned have placed local officials in a difficult position. Some patients have been sent to other cities for treatment; those who refuse to leave local hospitals say doctors have been given orders to stop their medication. To get the skittish back to work, factory officials have added an incentive of $20 to $30 to monthly salaries that range from $120 to $200.

In interviews, a half-dozen of those still hospitalized in Jilin said they had not been given a diagnosis nor were they allowed to see their medical records. One of them, Deng Yanli, 30, who is troubled by convulsions and constant dizziness, showed a receipt for 10 medications that included vitamin injections, pills to combat nausea and other treatments commonly given to stroke victims. She said doctors at Jihua Hospital stopped administering the drugs in early June in an effort to get her to leave.

The hospital director referred questions to the Jilin City Health Bureau, which issued a statement saying, “We have done our best diagnosing and treating these patients.”

Officials at Connell, which has resumed full production, say they are eager to move past the episode. Although privately owned, the plant has a complicated corporate structure that includes investors from Hong Kong and a number of local government officials. The aniline plant and the neighboring textile mill are partly owned by one another, and Connell, according to a company Web site, also runs a pharmaceutical concern that supplies Jilin City hospitals with 90 percent of their intravenous drugs.

Cementing the company’s prominence is its president, Song Zhiping, a representative to the National People’s Congress, China’s legislative body. [*] [how convenient] [it’s just so wonderful that in China, where the proletariat is the highest order of concern, no need to worry about conflict of interests] [*]

Connell executives said Ms. Song was traveling during a reporter’s visit to their offices, but Xu Zhongjie, vice chairman for corporate governance, said Ms. Song felt wounded by the allegations against her company, which he described as preposterous. “I come here every day, and do I look sick?” he asked with a broad smile. “If we were spreading poison, the government wouldn’t allow us to continue production, and I have faith in the government.”
Xiyun Yang contributed research.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Uighur Leader Raises New Accusations

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30uighur.html
July 30, 2009
Uighur Leader Raises New Accusations
By ANDREW JACOBS and MARTIN FACKLER [China] [PRC] [Xinjiang] [vast hinterlands where Han compete with other ethnicities] [global economic meltdown during which otherwise often tenable complications become untenable] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [followup] [*]
In the weeks since ethnic bloodletting claimed nearly 200 lives in the northwest Chinese region of Xinjiang, the government has been waging a global propaganda war against Rebiya Kadeer, the exiled Uighur leader it accuses of instigating the violence.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30uighur.html
July 30, 2009
Uighur Leader Raises New Accusations
By ANDREW JACOBS and MARTIN FACKLER [China] [PRC] [Xinjiang] [vast hinterlands where Han compete with other ethnicities] [global economic meltdown during which otherwise often tenable complications become untenable] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [followup] [*]
In the weeks since ethnic bloodletting claimed nearly 200 lives in the northwest Chinese region of Xinjiang, the government has been waging a global propaganda war against Rebiya Kadeer, the exiled Uighur leader it accuses of instigating the violence.

As a result, Ms. Kadeer, who spent more than four years in a Chinese prison and now lives in the United States, has emerged as the international face of the Uighur cause. On Wednesday, she ratcheted up the war of words during a visit to Japan, where she claimed that “nearly 10,000” Uighurs had disappeared “overnight” in Urumqi, [I think most people think it’s well over the 200 or so the govt has conceded but 10,000 sounds incredibly fantasticly pulled out of her …. Handbag] [*] the Xinjiang capital.

“Where did they go?” she asked during a news conference, according to The Associated Press. “Were they all killed or sent somewhere? The Chinese government should disclose what happened to them.”

Ms. Kadeer did not provide evidence to back up her assertion, which stands in stark contrast to government figures that place the numbers of those arrested at 1,200.

But her comments infuriated China, which summoned Japan’s ambassador in Beijing to express “strong dissatisfaction” with the decision to grant her a visa.

China’s Foreign Ministry demanded that Japan “take effective action to stop her anti-China, splittist activities.” The Japanese government declined to intervene, saying that Ms. Kadeer was visiting as a private citizen. [China’s tried and true diplomacy of demanding that democratic regimes with protections for free speech crack down on this loud mouth, ananthema in the system] [*]

The true story of what happened in Urumqi may never be known. But Ms. Kadeer’s and the Chinese government’s dueling, sometimes hyperbolic, accounts have sowed confusion and created an even wider chasm between the government and those pressing for greater Uighur autonomy. [that’s a shame] [*]

“This has become an exercise in influence-building and image management,” said Russell Leigh Moses, a Beijing-based analyst of Chinese politics. “As each side scrambles to push their version of events, the chances for dialogue are rapidly receding. Xinjiang could very well reignite, but instead of fire prevention, each party seems bent on trying to prove the other side is the one with the lighter fluid.”

China has not minced words in its approach to Ms. Kadeer, 62, who heads the World Uighur Congress, which advocates for Uighur self-determination. Editorial writers, government officials and even normally staid diplomats have described her as “a terrorist” and “a criminal” who caused the death of 197 people, most of them Han Chinese. As proof, they cite a phone call she made to her brother in Urumqi shortly before the strife began, warning him to stay off the streets. Ms. Kadeer does not deny making the call but says she was just looking out for his safety.

On Wednesday, Chinese officials delivered a DVD to the offices of The New York Times in Beijing titled “Xinjiang, Urumqi, July 5 Riots: Truth.” The 20-minute film, with versions in Arabic, Turkish, English and other languages, begins with idyllic scenes of Uighurs and members of other ethnic groups who inhabit the region and goes on to show graphic images of beatings that it says were “incited and controlled” [*] [great, wonderful restraint for a Party that has been in rule since 1949!] by Ms. Kadeer.

According to the state-run Xinhua news agency, the July 5 mayhem was orchestrated through text and e-mail messages. Gangs of killers, it said, were sent to 50 locations in Urumqi after protesters gathered at a downtown square to express anger over a brawl at a south China toy factory during which two Uighurs were beaten to death by Han Chinese co-workers.

In the official accounting of how events unfolded on July 5, security officials described mysterious women in “long Islamic robes” who issued orders to the rioters. One woman, they said, even passed out clubs.

Such assertions, however, are difficult to verify, and the government has yet to provide proof showing that Ms. Kadeer or her organization had a hand in planning the chaos.

In recent weeks Ms. Kadeer has given a very different narrative. She says that most of the dead were Uighur, not Han, and that as many as 1,000 people were killed, many of them peaceful demonstrators shot dead by security officials who chased them down dead-end streets and opened fire after turning off street lamps. [it’s possible and parts of it sound reasonably plausible though her nice round numbers suggest she simply rounds up to the nearest excitable level] [*]

She has not provided evidence to back up such claims, saying to reveal her sources would put them in peril. Interviews with both Han and Uighur residents in Urumqi, however, have not yielded any witnesses who can corroborate such accounts.

Ms. Kadeer’s next trip, to the Melbourne Film Festival in Australia, is sure to produce a fresh round of invective. A documentary about Ms. Kadeer’s life, which will be shown on Aug. 8, [great; that means we will have more to archive] [*] has already prompted three Chinese filmmakers to pull out of the festival. Last weekend, after a Chinese consular official told organizers to drop the film, the festival’s Web site was overrun by hackers, who replaced film schedules with a Chinese flag and slogans denouncing Ms. Kadeer.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Communists Lose in Moldova Vote

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/europe/31moldova.html
July 31, 2009
Communists Lose in Moldova Vote
By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ [Moldova] [former USSR] [Russia’s “Near Abroad”] [internal politics] [also a nationalistic movement from years ago latent in Moldova, Transdniestria, with the Dniestria river being the demarcation] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
CHISINAU, Moldova — Moldova’s pro-Western opposition parties appear to have unseated Europe’s last ruling Communist Party in repeat parliamentary elections that have become a test of whether the impoverished former Soviet republic aligns with the European Union or Moscow. [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/europe/31moldova.html
July 31, 2009
Communists Lose in Moldova Vote
By MICHAEL SCHWIRTZ [Moldova] [former USSR] [Russia’s “Near Abroad”] [internal politics] [also a nationalistic movement from years ago latent in Moldova, Transdniestria, with the Dniestria river being the demarcation] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
CHISINAU, Moldova — Moldova’s pro-Western opposition parties appear to have unseated Europe’s last ruling Communist Party in repeat parliamentary elections that have become a test of whether the impoverished former Soviet republic aligns with the European Union or Moscow. [*]

With 97 percent of the vote tabulated, the Communist Party seems to have lost the majority it held for eight years in Parliament, winning about 45 percent of the vote, [ouch for the communists and probably for Russia?] [*] Moldova’s Central Elections Commission said.

A smattering of opposition parties, loosely united in their pledge to forge stronger ties with the neighboring European Union, have vowed to form a coalition, which would give them 53 seats of the 101 seats in Parliament. [confirmed: tilt toward EU away from Moscow] [*]

But the Communists, with 48 seats in the legislature, won enough votes to block the pro-Western forces from choosing a president, which could plunge the country into a prolonged political crisis.

Wednesday’s repeat elections came almost four months after a victory by the Communist Party in a parliamentary election last April set off riots by young people desperate for an end to political and economic stagnation.

In line with the Constitution, Vladimir Voronin, Moldova’s departing president, dissolved Parliament and set new elections last month after the Communist Party twice failed to muster support from at least one opposition lawmaker needed to select a new president. Wedged between Ukraine and Romania, Moldova is Europe’s poorest country. Unemployment is high, and the country is heavily dependent upon remittances from thousands of Moldovans working abroad. [similar to Rommania, these two are really in desperate straights] [*]

The riots in April, sparked by allegations of electoral fraud, left government buildings gutted by fire and looting and at least three people dead.

The ensuing political crisis left Moldovan society, already fractured among competing ethnic and linguistic groups, even more polarized. Most young and urban citizens seek integration with the West, while the older and more rural population has a lingering affinity for Russia. [if you were old and living there with little security as you continue into your final years, you’d too want the old communist system that didn’t make your life easy but took some consideration for your life worth of work] [*]

In his eight years in power Mr. Voronin has been buoyed by an older generation nostalgic for the stability of Moldova’s Soviet past. In those years he has hewed closest to Russia, which maintains a contingent of troops in Moldova’s breakaway Transdniester region and supplies the majority of Moldova’s energy. Moscow also recently promised Moldova a $500 million loan. Mr. Voronin is obliged to step down, having served two terms, though he will remain in power until Parliament chooses a new president.

It is still unclear what accounted for the Communist loss just four months after the party won 60 seats in Parliament, though a major factor might have been the defection of Marian Lupu, a popular Parliament speaker who joined the small Democratic Party after the April elections. That party received 12.5 percent of the vote.

Seen as a kingmaker in Wednesday’s elections, Mr. Lupu has pledged to join in coalition with the other pro-Western forces, but has cautioned against ignoring Russia.

“It is difficult to predict how the future will play out,” said Oazu Nantoi, the deputy chairman of Mr. Lupu’s Democratic Party. “But the first step has been taken: Voronin’s monopoly on power has been broken.”

International monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe who observed the election were generally upbeat about the conduct of the vote. [wow, a relatively clean election in the Russian’s “Near Abroad”?] [*] But the O.S.C.E. said its 300 observers noted media coverage biased in favor of the Communists, intimidation of opposition supporters, and other violations of election law.

“The irregularities were many, but of the level and quality that would not affect the final results,” Ambassador Boris Frlec, head of the election observation mission of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights, said at a press conference.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Serbian Officials Say Mladic Is 'Within Reach'

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903280.html
Serbian Officials Say Mladic Is 'Within Reach'
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 30, 2009 former [Serbia] [Yugoslavia] [part of the old Soviet Bloc, though always somewhat uncomfortably so] [interesting and complex history with Croatia and Slovenai both on Nazi side of WWII with Catholicism dominant] [other former republics sided with Soviets, their Slaviic bretheren during WWII and orthodox religion] [smattering of Islam in Bosnia (much more than smattering) and Kosovo] [Serbia at war with piece by piece: Slovenai, followed by Croatia, then Bosnia, then Kosovo] [use psci350] [use ir text] [followup] [general bad guy, Ratko Mladic may be facing justice soon?] [*]
BELGRADE, Serbia -- Europe's most-wanted war crimes suspect has been on the run longer than Osama bin Laden. But after more than a decade of looking the other way, Serbian authorities say they are finally closing in on Gen. Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb commander charged with genocide and other crimes in the Balkan wars of the

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903280.html
Serbian Officials Say Mladic Is 'Within Reach'
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 30, 2009 former [Serbia] [Yugoslavia] [part of the old Soviet Bloc, though always somewhat uncomfortably so] [interesting and complex history with Croatia and Slovenai both on Nazi side of WWII with Catholicism dominant] [other former republics sided with Soviets, their Slaviic bretheren during WWII and orthodox religion] [smattering of Islam in Bosnia (much more than smattering) and Kosovo] [Serbia at war with piece by piece: Slovenai, followed by Croatia, then Bosnia, then Kosovo] [use psci350] [use ir text] [followup] [general bad guy, Ratko Mladic may be facing justice soon?] [*]
BELGRADE, Serbia -- Europe's most-wanted war crimes suspect has been on the run longer than Osama bin Laden. But after more than a decade of looking the other way, Serbian authorities say they are finally closing in on Gen. Ratko Mladic, the Bosnian Serb commander charged with genocide and other crimes in the Balkan wars of the 1990s. [no hurry?] [*]

"He's somewhere within reach," said Vladimir Vukcevic, Serbia's prosecutor in charge of investigating war crimes committed during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Vukcevic said that he could not yet pinpoint the fugitive general's location but that it was clear Mladic was in Serbia, adding: "Absolutely, I'm optimistic we're nearing the end. It must be done by the end of the year." [slowly but surely Serbia has overcome its intense nationalism that caused it to remain an outlier in Europe for so long] [so unfortunate situations in the 1990s and beyond including the US focusing nearly exclusively on Seribian atrocity at the expense of others (Kosovar, Bosnian, Croat, Slovenian, …)] [*]

For years, Serbian officials have said they were doing their best to catch Mladic and extradite him to the Netherlands, where he has been indicted by a U.N. tribunal on charges of crimes against humanity and other offenses. And skepticism remains deep here that the man many nationalist Serbs still consider a hero will be arrested anytime soon, despite a $5 million reward offered by the U.S. government.

But Serbian and European Union officials said that political conditions have shifted decisively against Mladic and that investigators, for the first time, have reconstructed his movements from the end of the Bosnian war in 1995 until 2006, [when we were in Russia in 2008, they found his old friend Radovan Karadzic] [*] when he was last confirmed to be in Serbia.

Also working against Mladic: the July 2008 arrest in Belgrade of fellow fugitive Radovan Karadzic, the Bosnian Serb political leader who prosecutors say worked hand-in-hand with the general to carry out a campaign of ethnic cleansing against Bosnian Muslims and Croats. Their goal was to create a Greater Serbia out of the remains of the former Yugoslavia by expelling or exterminating other ethnic groups. About a quarter-million people died during the conflict. [sort of a pan Slavism notion] [*]

Both men are charged in the executions of about 8,000 Muslims in the town of Srebrenica in 1995, the worst massacre in Europe since World War II, as well as a three-year bombing siege of Sarajevo that flattened the city and killed about 10,000 people.

Serbian investigators said they have concluded that Mladic had no recent contact with Karadzic, a psychologist by training who avoided capture for years by masquerading as a New Age healer. [*]The lack of a sustained public backlash to Karadzic's arrest, officials and analysts said, has made it easier for the government to redouble its efforts to find Mladic.

The biggest boost to the manhunt, however, was the election last year of a new Serbian government that has pledged to end the country's chilly relations with the West and join the European Union. [understandably, it’s taken a while for them to get over the biases that they resented foisted on them during Clinton admin and after] [*]

"You have a very different Serbia now," said Vuk Jeremic, Serbia's foreign minister. "This is probably the most pro-European government in the history of Serbia. It represents a coming out of the decades of crisis and war."

Serbia had hoped to begin the lengthy application process to join the European Union early this year. But the Dutch government has blocked Serbia's candidacy, insisting that it catch Mladic first. Mladic's freedom is a sore point in the Netherlands, whose peacekeeping troops were overrun by his forces in Srebrenica.

Rasim Ljajic, the Serbian official in charge of relations with the U.N. war crimes tribunal based in The Hague, said his government remains surprised that the Dutch did not drop their objections after Karadzic's capture. Ljajic said that nearly all other members of the European Union, as well as the United States, have expressed satisfaction with Serbia's record in tracking down war criminals and cooperating with the U.N. tribunal.

"Everybody but the Netherlands believes in our efforts," he said. "They are being very tough in their position, and it's hard to expect that they'll change."

At the same time, Ljajic echoed prosecutors' predictions that the rogue general would be caught by the end of the year. The minister said he would resign if Mladic is not arrested by then. "It's a moral obligation for us," he said.

Ljajic and other Serbian officials were vague when asked why they were so confident. [generally, this has meant they actually have started going after alleged criminals they formerly ignored] [*] But they acknowledged that previous governments in Belgrade had either overtly protected Mladic or not tried very hard to find him.

The extent of that protection was underscored last month when a Sarajevo television station broadcast several homemade videos of Mladic enjoying life while on the run, including an undated clip of him playing table tennis at a Serbian military barracks. Other videos showed him singing at weddings and playing in the snow. [*]

Serbian investigators said they discovered the videos in December during a search of the Mladic family home in Belgrade, Serbia's capital, and turned them over to the U.N. tribunal. The Sarajevo TV station said some of the videos appeared to have been recorded as recently as last year. Serbian officials denied that, saying all the videos were at least eight years old.

While searching the house, police also found 360 pages of wartime diaries belonging to Mladic. Ljajic described the diaries, in which Mladic talks about his turbulent relations with Karadzic and former Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, as a much more significant recovery. [I don’t now recall when Milosevic died but he died while undergoing prosecution in the Hague] [*]

When asked why investigators waited until December to search the Mladic family home, Ljajic shrugged. "It was so obvious that he was not there," he said.

Prosecutors said that the last time Mladic was confirmed as being in Belgrade was December 2005.

In June 2006, investigators thought they were on the verge of a breakthrough as they followed a suspect who was "a direct connection to Mladic," said Vukcevic, the prosecutor.

"But there was a mistake made by the security services, and they missed the person who was closest to Mladic," he said. [*]

Vukcevic described Mladic as "very old and very sick" and said investigators have kept former Serbian military physicians under close surveillance. He declined to comment on local media reports that Mladic, now 67, suffered a mild stroke years ago.

Goran Petrovic, a former chief of Serbia's civilian intelligence service, said Mladic was probably receiving help from retired military officers or other nationalist supporters. "There are a lot of people who would report Mladic to the police, but even more who wouldn't," [that’s understandable but even they get weary of it all over time and beging wondering what’s the point?] [*]he said.

He said the Serbian government was not eager to turn over Mladic to The Hague for a show trial but was feeling the pressure to act.
"They're waiting for Mladic to die before they have to choose between him and the European Union," Petrovic said. "They would be happy if Mladic would go to The Hague and die there, without a trial." [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Nigerian Troops Storm Sect Compound

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31nigeria.html
July 31, 2009
Nigerian Troops Storm Sect Compound
By ADAM NOSSITER and ALAN COWELL [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [I scarcely remember Islamic cults as significant “insurgency” factor in Nigeria the past several years?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — After days of fighting in the northern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, government forces claimed Thursday to have killed the deputy leader of a fundamentalist Islamic sect in a climactic gun battle that forced the leader of the insurgents to flee, [*]news reports said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/africa/31nigeria.html
July 31, 2009
Nigerian Troops Storm Sect Compound
By ADAM NOSSITER and ALAN COWELL [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [I scarcely remember Islamic cults as significant “insurgency” factor in Nigeria the past several years?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — After days of fighting in the northern Nigerian city of Maiduguri, government forces claimed Thursday to have killed the deputy leader of a fundamentalist Islamic sect in a climactic gun battle that forced the leader of the insurgents to flee, [*]news reports said.

The reports came after northern Nigeria was hit by a fourth day of violence on Wednesday. Soldiers trying to stamp out resistance from the sect, popularly known as Boko Haram, [*]shelled its headquarters in Maiduguri. [*]The authorities say the sect has carried out two attacks on police stations and was perhaps plotting more. Already, hundreds of people have been killed in clashes spread across four states, according to reporters in the area and news agencies.

On Thursday, a reporter for The Associated Press witnessed soldiers shooting their way into the sect’s mosque in Maiduguri. The gun battle left scores dead. Maj. Gen. Saleh Maina, the commander of Nigerian troops in the city, was quoted as saying the sect’s deputy leader was among the dead, but that the leader of the movement, Mohammed Yusuf, escaped and fled with some 300 followers. [that can’t be good] [if these guys go to ground then build their forces based on the bitter taste they scramed on, look out for messy resolution] [*]

News reports said the army was conducting a house-to-house search Thursday on the outskirts of Maiduguri for Mr. Yusuf.

The A.P. reporter later counted about 50 bodies inside the building and another 50 in the courtyard outside. The militants were armed with homemade hunting rifles, bows and arrows and scimitars, The A.P. said.

One body among five inside a large house was that of Bukar Shekau, the sect’s vice chairman, General Maina was quoted saying. “The mission has been accomplished,” he said.

The governor of Borno State, Ali Modu Sheriff, was quoted by Reuters as saying: “Security personnel have succeeded in dislodging the militants and I urge everyone to go about their normal duties.” He said that anyone caught harboring fugitive sect members would “be dealt with according to the law.” [*]

But residents said they were still too afraid to venture out, Reuters reported, after a police station was torched late on Wednesday and bursts of shooting continued throughout the night.

The Nigerian military took command of the operation against the insurgents from the police in a move that “illustrates the resolve of the Nigerian government to bring the situation under control,” said Emmanuel Ojukwu, a spokesman for the Nigerian police.

Late Wednesday, Isa Umar Gusau, a reporter for The Daily Trust, a Nigerian newspaper, said the army had “blown up the enclave of the sect leaders.”

“The place has been bombed,” he said, describing a complex, now in flames, consisting of a clinic, a mosque and residences where the group’s leader had lived.

Mr. Gusau and another reporter, Idris Abdullahi, said they had seen dozens of bodies. “The military are going in, in force,” said Mr. Abdullahi, a reporter for the News Agency of Nigeria. “Hundreds have been killed.” [*]

Officials described a city of deserted streets and businesses shut tight. “Everybody is looking for safety,” said Yushau Shuaib, a spokesman for the Nigerian National Emergency Management Agency. “They don’t want to be caught in the fire between the military and the militants.”

With phone lines largely down, the situation seemed increasingly desperate on Wednesday. “The town is in a state of siege,” said Jibrin Ibrahim, who directs the Center for Democracy and Development in Abuja, the Nigerian capital. “People don’t have food at home.”

Some reports suggested that as many as 43 people had been killed in Yobe State on Wednesday, though Mr. Ojukwu refused to say how many had died.

The government also gave contradictory accounts of what touched off the conflict with the militants, who are sometimes referred to as the Taliban. Nigerian security officials have repeatedly argued that the militants attacked first, but on Wednesday, President Umaru Yar’Adua rejected that argument. [hum, interesting?] [*]

“It was not the Taliban group that attacked the security agents first, no,” he said, according to The A.P. News accounts and analysts suggested that clashes between security forces and sect members over the last six weeks preceded the latest violence, reinforcing Mr. Yar’Adua’s suggestion that the group had been in the sights of officials for some time.

On June 11, police officers in Maiduguri fired on a sect funeral procession, shooting 17. Mr. Yusuf, denouncing the shootings, vowed to take revenge, according to Nnamdi Obasi, a senior analyst with the International Crisis Group, a nonprofit group dedicated to conflict resolution.

“It looked like the stage was set for trouble,” Mr. Obasi said.

Then, last Friday, the police raided a sect hide-out south of Maiduguri and recovered “a lot of combat materials,” Mr. Obasi said, including bomb-making equipment.

Early Sunday, according to the police, the group struck back, attacking a police headquarters in Bauchi. The violence spread quickly, with security forces moving in to crush the militants.

The sect rejects Western education, supports the imposition of strict Islamic law and believes in segregation of the sexes. Islamic law has been applied in the northern Nigerian states for the last decade, but not in its strictest form. [what do you want to bet they also are for female sexual mutilation know as female circumscion ?] [*]

Underlying the conflict is the deep poverty of millions in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation. “You have a ready army that can be enlisted in violent enterprises,” Mr. Obasi said. “These are people who feel the Western models of education and government have failed them.”
Adam Nossiter reported from Dakar, Senegal, and Alan Cowell from Paris.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Kyrgyzstan: Crackdown on Protests of Election Result

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30briefs-Kyrgyzstanbrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | Europe
Kyrgyzstan: Crackdown on Protests of Election Result
By ELLEN BARRY [Kyrgyzstan] [former USSR] [stans in Russia’s neighborhood] [more evidence of slip sliding away] [security versus principles for US when it comes to relations between the US and the “stans”] [during the W. Bush and now Obama administrations, principles are sacrificed for putative security] [as the Obama people will learn as every administration seems to learn sooner or later, these acts of expediency have a way of coming back to bite the US in the behind] [followup] [*]
The police in Kyrgyzstan’s capital, Bishkek, detained 64 opposition demonstrators on Wednesday after marches protesting the results of last week’s presidential election. [*] President Kurmanbek Bakiyev won with 76 percent of the vote in an election that the

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30briefs-Kyrgyzstanbrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | Europe
Kyrgyzstan: Crackdown on Protests of Election Result
By ELLEN BARRY [Kyrgyzstan] [former USSR] [stans in Russia’s neighborhood] [more evidence of slip sliding away] [security versus principles for US when it comes to relations between the US and the “stans”] [during the W. Bush and now Obama administrations, principles are sacrificed for putative security] [as the Obama people will learn as every administration seems to learn sooner or later, these acts of expediency have a way of coming back to bite the US in the behind] [followup] [*]
The police in Kyrgyzstan’s capital, Bishkek, detained 64 opposition demonstrators on Wednesday after marches protesting the results of last week’s presidential election. [*] President Kurmanbek Bakiyev won with 76 percent of the vote in an election that the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said “fell short of key standards Kyrgyzstan has committed to.” An opposition candidate, Almazbek Atambayev, who trailed Mr. Bakiyev with 8 percent and withdrew his candidacy during the balloting, has contested the vote. [on what grounds?] [sounds like sour grapes though everybody knows the fix was in—he withdrew because he knew it so why squeak now?] [*]Joomart Saparbaev, a spokesman for Mr. Atambayev’s party, said that hundreds of people protested in the capital and in nearby regions.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903515.html
In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid
Separation of Church and State at Issue
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Central Asia] [the interim between the important Middle East (Near East) and South Asia] [the “stans” of the former USSR, at least most were] [nomadic, high-plaines drifters] [strategic cross roads along with remnants of the silk road] [no in the strategic crosshairs of global jihadis and US counterinsurgency efforts] [cross in govt and societal] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Three years ago, while working for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Kyrgyzstan, Clifford H. Brown came across an idea that he thought could help stem the spread of radical Islam in the Central Asian nation.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903515.html
In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid
Separation of Church and State at Issue
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Central Asia] [the interim between the important Middle East (Near East) and South Asia] [the “stans” of the former USSR, at least most were] [nomadic, high-plaines drifters] [strategic cross roads along with remnants of the silk road] [no in the strategic crosshairs of global jihadis and US counterinsurgency efforts] [cross in govt and societal] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Three years ago, while working for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Kyrgyzstan, Clifford H. Brown came across an idea that he thought could help stem the spread of radical Islam in the Central Asian nation.

The University of Montana had proposed translating Islamic writings from Persian and Arabic into the local Uzbek and Kyrgyz languages. Brown hoped the translations could have a moderating influence at a time when a conservative Islamist group, Hizb ut-Tahrir, [why into additional languages when so many Arabic readers exist in these general regions?] [it’s all Arabic script (or at least I can’t think of one of them off hand that isn’t?) anyway] [also, are the Persian-Dari-… translations that will be translated yet again not skew slightly away from Sunni theology?] [*] was expanding its influence in the region.

"Islam has a large body of moderate literature saying, for example, that suicide is a sin against Allah," he later wrote in a paper describing his efforts to fund the initiative. "Not a bad idea, I thought at the time."

But USAID lawyers rejected the proposal, saying that using taxpayer funds would violate a provision in the First Amendment barring the government's promotion of religion. [*] [I’d have to give this some thought] The agency also prohibited Brown from publishing the opinion piece, which laid out his case for the proposal, according to Brown and a senior USAID official. A USAID lawyer said publication of the paper would have violated government restrictions on disclosure of privileged information.

The role of religion in overseas assistance has long been highly sensitive for a country founded on the principle that state and religion should be separate. But as U.S. policymakers seek to curtail the influence of radical Islam, they are being increasingly hamstrung by legal barriers, [since when?] [does the US not take the Dalia Lama’s side which is at least partly religious in the Sino-Tibet case?] [and I’m sure I could come up with others in a few minutes] [*] some experts say.

USAID does provide funds for faith-based organizations -- mostly Christian groups -- in instances in which it says the aid is strictly for secular purposes. But the line between secular and religious is often blurry. [to be sure] [so why reject this case out of hand?] [I have a raft of questions before we would even get to the 1st amendment tests] [*]

Last week, the USAID inspector general's office raised concerns about the agency spending more than $325,000 to repair four mosques and adjoining buildings in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, [exactly] [*] which was once an insurgent hub. USAID argued that most of the money went to repair facilities that provided jobs, social services, food and other basics for the needy. The agency noted that it had withheld payment of more than $45,000 for mosque repairs because the contractor could not demonstrate that the work served a secular purpose.

Still, some scholars say that restrictions on USAID and other American civilian agencies have undercut the United States' ability to win the hearts and minds of Muslims in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia, where Islam plays a central role in public and private life.

Karin von Hippel, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said military commanders have been given much more freedom to fund Islamic causes -- such as rehabilitation of mosques and assistance for religious schools. She argued that U.S. civilian agencies need to be given the same flexibility. [without having thought much about this, I would have to agree with her at first blush] [*]

Von Hippel said many officials have simply steered clear of Islamic charities because they do not understand how they function and fear that their careers could be harmed if they inadvertently support an entity that later turns out to be linked to militants. "We can't just sit on our hands, which is what we have been doing for the past eight years," von Hippel said.

At the heart of the debate is a dispute about the intent of the First Amendment's establishment clause, which bars Congress from establishing a state religion or prohibiting the free expression of religious thought. Brown, who served as a USAID lawyer for more than a decade, said he thinks that the First Amendment does not apply to overseas assistance. [it’s always sort of dazzled me how people pick and choose when to apply America’s constitution to US foreign policy] [e.g., I’m teaching my Vietnam War class this fall; when Ike embraced Diem, it was expllicity because Diem was Catholic and had studies in NJ monestary] [*]

"Our legal position is too conservative. We've got a war on terror," Brown said. "The lawyers are concerned about excessive entanglement with religion. Well, we're already entangled." [that’s for sure] [whether we want to look at it as religious in nature, America’s majority religions are implicated big time] [*]

Brown maintains that U.S. efforts to promote democracy and build schools, roads and clinics in the Islamic world will not succeed unless American officials help foster the spread of moderate Islam and its a message of peace.

Gary Winter, USAID's legal counsel, said the agency would never fund any program with a religious purpose. He added, though, that "the legal test goes beyond that to [include] endorsement of religion, indoctrination of religions, excessive entanglement with religion. We have to try to accomplish our secular purpose while still not violating these legal principles." [what I read at the top was a political purpose—in what we think of as political Islam, to agitate in behalf of moderate political Islam over radical political Islam] [the latter appears incompatible with Western modernity; in consequence, the US and areas where this type of radical political Islam have taken root (Deobandi in South and Central Asia, Wahabi in Saudi, so forth) may not be able to coexist with radical political Islam] [I see that as fundamentally existential, not religious] [*]

Winter said there are ways that USAID can provide assistance to Islamic institutions without breaking the law. For instance, he said, the USAID could finance mathematics textbooks or English classes for students in Islamic schools in Afghanistan, while leaving it to others to pay for Koranic studies programs. Or if the agency selected a local religious leader to support an AIDS-prevention program, it could try to minimize the religious content of the charitable work. "If you're talking about sexual behavior, you don't necessarily have to get into the scriptures," he said.

Little USAID funding has gone to Islamic groups in recent years. From 2001 to 2005, more than 98 percent of agency funds for faith-based organizations went to Christian groups, according to figures obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by the Boston Globe newspaper in 2006. Winter said most of the faith-based groups applying for aid have been Christian. He added that the agency is eager to reach out to Islamic moderates. [there we discover the actual reason] [if it has any religious angle, no matter how remote, it must be pro Christian else were consider it a violation of 1st amendment civlil liberties, which I hasten to use legalese just to stress the iron, we know as the establishment (of religion) clause] [*]

Some experts, meanwhile, have urged caution on that front. Jonathan Benthall, an anthropologist at University College London, said there are serious risks of outsiders interfering in the theology of Islam.

He noted that when the U.S. government extended support to guerrillas who opposed the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s, money in one case supported a journal promoting militant jihad. [yes, it most certainly did] [and it supported somewhat religious folks (KMT) though clearly few were Christian against explicity non religious CCP, c. 1940s through present] [*]

Brown recalled that the agency once learned that a program it had supported in Afghanistan in the 1980s used primary textbooks that dealt with the life and views of the prophet Muhammad.

To highlight the sensitivity of the issue, a senior USAID lawyer pulled an Afghan prayer rug from his safe and showed it to his colleagues, Brown said. A USAID emblem was sewn onto the back.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903515.html
In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid
Separation of Church and State at Issue
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Central Asia] [the interim between the important Middle East (Near East) and South Asia] [the “stans” of the former USSR, at least most were] [nomadic, high-plaines drifters] [strategic cross roads along with remnants of the silk road] [no in the strategic crosshairs of global jihadis and US counterinsurgency efforts] [cross in govt and societal] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Three years ago, while working for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Kyrgyzstan, Clifford H. Brown came across an idea that he thought could help stem the spread of radical Islam in the Central Asian nation.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072903515.html
In Fighting Radical Islam, Tricky Course for U.S. Aid
Separation of Church and State at Issue
By Colum Lynch
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [Central Asia] [the interim between the important Middle East (Near East) and South Asia] [the “stans” of the former USSR, at least most were] [nomadic, high-plaines drifters] [strategic cross roads along with remnants of the silk road] [no in the strategic crosshairs of global jihadis and US counterinsurgency efforts] [cross in govt and societal] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Three years ago, while working for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Kyrgyzstan, Clifford H. Brown came across an idea that he thought could help stem the spread of radical Islam in the Central Asian nation.

The University of Montana had proposed translating Islamic writings from Persian and Arabic into the local Uzbek and Kyrgyz languages. Brown hoped the translations could have a moderating influence at a time when a conservative Islamist group, Hizb ut-Tahrir, [why into additional languages when so many Arabic readers exist in these general regions?] [it’s all Arabic script (or at least I can’t think of one of them off hand that isn’t?) anyway] [also, are the Persian-Dari-… translations that will be translated yet again not skew slightly away from Sunni theology?] [*] was expanding its influence in the region.

"Islam has a large body of moderate literature saying, for example, that suicide is a sin against Allah," he later wrote in a paper describing his efforts to fund the initiative. "Not a bad idea, I thought at the time."

But USAID lawyers rejected the proposal, saying that using taxpayer funds would violate a provision in the First Amendment barring the government's promotion of religion. [*] [I’d have to give this some thought] The agency also prohibited Brown from publishing the opinion piece, which laid out his case for the proposal, according to Brown and a senior USAID official. A USAID lawyer said publication of the paper would have violated government restrictions on disclosure of privileged information.

The role of religion in overseas assistance has long been highly sensitive for a country founded on the principle that state and religion should be separate. But as U.S. policymakers seek to curtail the influence of radical Islam, they are being increasingly hamstrung by legal barriers, [since when?] [does the US not take the Dalia Lama’s side which is at least partly religious in the Sino-Tibet case?] [and I’m sure I could come up with others in a few minutes] [*] some experts say.

USAID does provide funds for faith-based organizations -- mostly Christian groups -- in instances in which it says the aid is strictly for secular purposes. But the line between secular and religious is often blurry. [to be sure] [so why reject this case out of hand?] [I have a raft of questions before we would even get to the 1st amendment tests] [*]

Last week, the USAID inspector general's office raised concerns about the agency spending more than $325,000 to repair four mosques and adjoining buildings in the Iraqi city of Fallujah, [exactly] [*] which was once an insurgent hub. USAID argued that most of the money went to repair facilities that provided jobs, social services, food and other basics for the needy. The agency noted that it had withheld payment of more than $45,000 for mosque repairs because the contractor could not demonstrate that the work served a secular purpose.

Still, some scholars say that restrictions on USAID and other American civilian agencies have undercut the United States' ability to win the hearts and minds of Muslims in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia, where Islam plays a central role in public and private life.

Karin von Hippel, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said military commanders have been given much more freedom to fund Islamic causes -- such as rehabilitation of mosques and assistance for religious schools. She argued that U.S. civilian agencies need to be given the same flexibility. [without having thought much about this, I would have to agree with her at first blush] [*]

Von Hippel said many officials have simply steered clear of Islamic charities because they do not understand how they function and fear that their careers could be harmed if they inadvertently support an entity that later turns out to be linked to militants. "We can't just sit on our hands, which is what we have been doing for the past eight years," von Hippel said.

At the heart of the debate is a dispute about the intent of the First Amendment's establishment clause, which bars Congress from establishing a state religion or prohibiting the free expression of religious thought. Brown, who served as a USAID lawyer for more than a decade, said he thinks that the First Amendment does not apply to overseas assistance. [it’s always sort of dazzled me how people pick and choose when to apply America’s constitution to US foreign policy] [e.g., I’m teaching my Vietnam War class this fall; when Ike embraced Diem, it was expllicity because Diem was Catholic and had studies in NJ monestary] [*]

"Our legal position is too conservative. We've got a war on terror," Brown said. "The lawyers are concerned about excessive entanglement with religion. Well, we're already entangled." [that’s for sure] [whether we want to look at it as religious in nature, America’s majority religions are implicated big time] [*]

Brown maintains that U.S. efforts to promote democracy and build schools, roads and clinics in the Islamic world will not succeed unless American officials help foster the spread of moderate Islam and its a message of peace.

Gary Winter, USAID's legal counsel, said the agency would never fund any program with a religious purpose. He added, though, that "the legal test goes beyond that to [include] endorsement of religion, indoctrination of religions, excessive entanglement with religion. We have to try to accomplish our secular purpose while still not violating these legal principles." [what I read at the top was a political purpose—in what we think of as political Islam, to agitate in behalf of moderate political Islam over radical political Islam] [the latter appears incompatible with Western modernity; in consequence, the US and areas where this type of radical political Islam have taken root (Deobandi in South and Central Asia, Wahabi in Saudi, so forth) may not be able to coexist with radical political Islam] [I see that as fundamentally existential, not religious] [*]

Winter said there are ways that USAID can provide assistance to Islamic institutions without breaking the law. For instance, he said, the USAID could finance mathematics textbooks or English classes for students in Islamic schools in Afghanistan, while leaving it to others to pay for Koranic studies programs. Or if the agency selected a local religious leader to support an AIDS-prevention program, it could try to minimize the religious content of the charitable work. "If you're talking about sexual behavior, you don't necessarily have to get into the scriptures," he said.

Little USAID funding has gone to Islamic groups in recent years. From 2001 to 2005, more than 98 percent of agency funds for faith-based organizations went to Christian groups, according to figures obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request by the Boston Globe newspaper in 2006. Winter said most of the faith-based groups applying for aid have been Christian. He added that the agency is eager to reach out to Islamic moderates. [there we discover the actual reason] [if it has any religious angle, no matter how remote, it must be pro Christian else were consider it a violation of 1st amendment civlil liberties, which I hasten to use legalese just to stress the iron, we know as the establishment (of religion) clause] [*]

Some experts, meanwhile, have urged caution on that front. Jonathan Benthall, an anthropologist at University College London, said there are serious risks of outsiders interfering in the theology of Islam.

He noted that when the U.S. government extended support to guerrillas who opposed the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s, money in one case supported a journal promoting militant jihad. [yes, it most certainly did] [and it supported somewhat religious folks (KMT) though clearly few were Christian against explicity non religious CCP, c. 1940s through present] [*]

Brown recalled that the agency once learned that a program it had supported in Afghanistan in the 1980s used primary textbooks that dealt with the life and views of the prophet Muhammad.

To highlight the sensitivity of the issue, a senior USAID lawyer pulled an Afghan prayer rug from his safe and showed it to his colleagues, Brown said. A USAID emblem was sewn onto the back.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Gaza Strip to Get Access to Reconstruction Materials

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30briefs-Israelbrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Gaza Strip to Get Access to Reconstruction Materials
By REUTERS Palestine] [Gaza] [Hamastan] [Gaza more desperate than usual, what with the effects of December’s war] [Bibi’s righteous causes: including the Israeli tradition of collective punishment] [I understand why Israel does it but I am against it on mutiple levels, not least of which is I don’t think it works] [followup] [I’d love to see Israel do what it’s able to do which is to afford to be somewhat magnanimous] [Israel won, and it won long ago and while there’s still plenty of danger, it can afford a little generosity] [I think it would do a lot of good all around] [*]
Israel will allow some cement and steel into the Gaza Strip for reconstruction, officials said Wednesday. After Hamas seized control of Gaza in 2007, Israel curbed imports that it said could be used to make arms or bunkers. The lack of cement and steel has been particularly problematic since Israel’s offensive against Gaza in December and

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30briefs-Israelbrf.html
July 30, 2009
World Briefing | Middle East
Gaza Strip to Get Access to Reconstruction Materials
By REUTERS Palestine] [Gaza] [Hamastan] [Gaza more desperate than usual, what with the effects of December’s war] [Bibi’s righteous causes: including the Israeli tradition of collective punishment] [I understand why Israel does it but I am against it on mutiple levels, not least of which is I don’t think it works] [followup] [I’d love to see Israel do what it’s able to do which is to afford to be somewhat magnanimous] [Israel won, and it won long ago and while there’s still plenty of danger, it can afford a little generosity] [I think it would do a lot of good all around] [*]
Israel will allow some cement and steel into the Gaza Strip for reconstruction, officials said Wednesday. After Hamas seized control of Gaza in 2007, Israel curbed imports that it said could be used to make arms or bunkers. The lack of cement and steel has been particularly problematic since Israel’s offensive against Gaza in December and January destroyed infrastructure. Israeli officials said the cement would be admitted for three projects in Gaza, including a flour mill. [good for Israel!] [excellent, no panacea but what I wonderful start] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

West Bank Settlers Send Obama Defiant Message

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30settlers.html
July 30, 2009
West Bank Settlers Send Obama Defiant Message
By ETHAN BRONNER [Palestine] [Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [West Bank, Fatahstine] [some Israelis feel like they are being pushed around by the Obama administration] [this is playing into fairly typical Israeli nationalism, complicated by US-Israeli intersections of ugly politics] [on the one hand, it’s all understandable and relatively harmless] [on the other hand, it’s every bit as ugly when it occurs in friendly ally territory (Israel) as it is here in America—there appears to be some not very thinly veiled racism at its base?] followup] [few weeks back some Long Island Jewish Americans were in Tel Aviv drinking too much alcohol and mixing with video cameras and it was and continues to be ugly and regretable] [some malcontents are stirring this up] [*]
NERIA, West Bank — In this land of endless history and ethereal beauty, several thousand Jewish settlers gathered on a dozen West Bank hills with makeshift huts and Israeli flags over several days this week to mark an invented anniversary and defy the American president, [they may think they are defying the US president (and most Americans) but they are defying their compatriots in Israel where the masses sort of

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30settlers.html
July 30, 2009
West Bank Settlers Send Obama Defiant Message
By ETHAN BRONNER [Palestine] [Israeli-Palestinian conflict] [West Bank, Fatahstine] [some Israelis feel like they are being pushed around by the Obama administration] [this is playing into fairly typical Israeli nationalism, complicated by US-Israeli intersections of ugly politics] [on the one hand, it’s all understandable and relatively harmless] [on the other hand, it’s every bit as ugly when it occurs in friendly ally territory (Israel) as it is here in America—there appears to be some not very thinly veiled racism at its base?] followup] [few weeks back some Long Island Jewish Americans were in Tel Aviv drinking too much alcohol and mixing with video cameras and it was and continues to be ugly and regretable] [some malcontents are stirring this up] [*]
NERIA, West Bank — In this land of endless history and ethereal beauty, several thousand Jewish settlers gathered on a dozen West Bank hills with makeshift huts and Israeli flags over several days this week to mark an invented anniversary and defy the American president, [they may think they are defying the US president (and most Americans) but they are defying their compatriots in Israel where the masses sort of tolerate the fringe settlers] [*] conveying to his aides visiting Jerusalem what they thought of his demand for a settlement freeze.

Eleven tiny settler outposts were inaugurated, including one next to this settlement in the rugged Samarian hills. A clearing encompassing a generator and a hut with a corrugated metal roof and a ritual mezuza on its doorpost now bears the name Givat Egoz. This is how nearby Neria, with 180 families, got its start 18 years ago.

“We are rebuilding the land of Israel,” Rabbi Yigael Shandorfi, leader of a religious academy at the neighboring settlement outpost of Nahliel, said during the ceremony. [just like in America, people specialize in manipulating other peoples’ superstitions and anxieties about god] [I mean, ask yourself if god was so concerned with Obama and omnipotent as most of these yahoos insist, why’s Obama president] [oh yeah, he isn’t because he’s Kenyan!] [*] “Our hope is that there will be roads, electricity and water.” The message to President Obama, he said, is that this is Jewish land. He did not use the president’s name, but an insulting Hebrew slang for a black man and the phrase “that Arab they call a president.”

None of the hundreds gathered — mostly couples with large families, but also armed young men and teenagers from other outposts — objected. Yitzhak Shadmi, leader of the regional council of settlements, said Mr. Obama was a racist and anti-Semite for his assertion that Jews should not build here, but Arabs could.

Mr. Shadmi said the ceremonies across the West Bank this week honored a moment in 1946 when Zionists established 11 settlements in the northern Negev of Palestine in defiance of the British rulers before Israel was created. It was important for the new outposts to be established while Washington’s emissaries were visiting, he said. George J. Mitchell, the special envoy for the Middle East, who is pressing the settlement freeze, was in the West Bank at the start of the week.

The national security adviser, James L. Jones, and a White House adviser on the region, Dennis B. Ross, held meetings in Jerusalem on Wednesday as part of the negotiations, which also include attempts to get Arab governments and Palestinians to reciprocate if the Israelis agree to the freeze. [*]

“We wanted to do this while they were here,” Mr. Shadmi said. “We’re saying, ‘Mitchell, go home.’ ” [it’s understandable] [Israel is a small but accomplished country but has lived with the shame of occupation for a long time now] [all this comes together in odd ways with America’s domestic political machinations] [*]

When the settlement of Neria was created in 1991, it had a similar purpose. Yossi Dermer, spokesman for the settlement, said it was known slyly to intimates as “the James Baker settlement” because it was set up to convey a message of defiance before a visit by James A. Baker III, secretary of state for the first President George Bush.

Because West Bank settlements officially require Israeli government approval and the new outposts did not obtain it, the Israeli police have dismantled several of the new ones already. But just as quickly, they are being rebuilt, sometimes a bit bigger. At nearly every outpost, the ruins left by past police actions lie next to newly built huts.

“We’ll build and build, and every time they destroy it we will build bigger and better and prettier,” asserted Tirael Cohen, a 16-year-old girl who lives at Ramat Migron, an extension of the unauthorized Migron outpost, not far from Ramallah, a large Palestinian city in the West Bank. Ruined corrugated metal and pieces of wood were strewn on the ground nearby.

Tirael has lived at Ramat Migron for a year and a half with 10 other girls, and, at a religiously modest distance away, 10 boys live in a separate structure. The girls cook, the boys build and maintain, and all study at nearby religious academies.

About 40 religious girls from within Israel and West Bank settlements spent three days at Ramat Migron last week in what they called “spiritual preparation” for coming battles over the land. [yikes] [*]

On the outside wall of the kitchen is a rabbinical quotation about the need to redeem the land of Israel. It says “bare mountains and deserted fields cry out for life and creation,” and adds: “An internal revolution is taking place here, a revolution in man and the earth. These are the true pains of salvation.”

The Migron outpost itself is expected to be taken down because it is built on land that, according to a court case, belongs to private Palestinian families. Centuries-old olive trees dot the landscape.

The Obama administration is hoping to help establish a Palestinian state in nearly all of the West Bank next to Israel. One major challenge is what to do with the 300,000 Israeli Jews who have settled here over four decades, often at their government’s urging.

Many could be incorporated into Israel through a border adjustment; others say they would move if compensated. But some, like these outpost settlers, say they will never move because they believe they are fulfilling God’s plan with every hut they put up. They are likely to be a major stumbling block to any attempt to find a two-state solution.

At the Neria outpost celebration, Noam Rein, a father of 10, looked out across the hills at Ramallah and called its presence “temporary.”

He added: “The Torah says the land of Israel is for the Jewish people. This is just the beginning. We will build 1,000 homes here. The Arabs cannot stay here, not because we hate them, but because this is not their place.” [no offense rabbi but that’s why we don’t take the Torah and the Bible seriously—or at least we don’t in terms of world politics] [*]

Among the religious leaders who spoke at the ceremony, Rabbi Yair Remer of Harasha, a nearby outpost, noted that Thursday was the Ninth of Av, a Jewish day of mourning commemorating the destruction of the ancient temples. He suggested that the best way to cope with the tragedy of Jewish history was to do what the young builders of this outpost were doing.

“The land rejoices because its children are returning to her,” he said, referring to Jewish settlers, making no mention of the 2.5 million Palestinians here. [I’m sure it was an accidential oversight?] [*]
Tirael, the teenager from Ramat Migron, put it another way: “I believe that every inch of this land is us, our blood. If we lose one inch, it is like losing a person.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Britain Says It Fears 2 Hostages in Iraq Are Dead

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30britain.html
July 30, 2009
Britain Says It Fears 2 Hostages in Iraq Are Dead
By JOHN F. BURNS [UK] [London] [EU3] [both Spanish and British govts wrestling with popular opinion against Afghanistan] [followup] [interesting how Spain is attempting to do the right thing—it’s not particularly surprising with the UK given the US-UK special relationship; but when socialist PM Zapatero publicly agonizes over doing right thing by US, it’s rather interesting to watch] [British hostages from way back in 2007] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
LONDON — The British government announced Wednesday that two more British hostages in Iraq were believed to have been killed by their captors, leaving just one of five men kidnapped together in 2007 still unaccounted for, but thought to be alive.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30britain.html
July 30, 2009
Britain Says It Fears 2 Hostages in Iraq Are Dead
By JOHN F. BURNS [UK] [London] [EU3] [both Spanish and British govts wrestling with popular opinion against Afghanistan] [followup] [interesting how Spain is attempting to do the right thing—it’s not particularly surprising with the UK given the US-UK special relationship; but when socialist PM Zapatero publicly agonizes over doing right thing by US, it’s rather interesting to watch] [British hostages from way back in 2007] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
LONDON — The British government announced Wednesday that two more British hostages in Iraq were believed to have been killed by their captors, leaving just one of five men kidnapped together in 2007 still unaccounted for, but thought to be alive.

The announcement cast fresh doubts on a plan that sought to win the hostages’ freedom with the staged release of Shiite insurgent leaders from American custody. [*] [huh?]

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, on vacation in Scotland, issued a statement saying it was “very likely” that the two hostages, Alan McMenemy and Alec MacLachlan, were dead, and urging the release of another hostage, Peter Moore, “whom we still believe to be alive.”

The bodies of two other hostages, Jason Swindlehurst and Jason Creswell, were handed over to the British Embassy in Baghdad last month.

Officials at the Foreign Office said it appeared that the four had been shot dead at the same time, with the bodies of Mr. McMenemy and Mr. MacLachlan held back by the captors. That appeared to suggest that the Shiite militants holding the Britons had killed them while they were negotiating a deal to exchange them for 10 members of the group that carried out the kidnappings.

One of the men whose freedom was demanded by the kidnappers, Laith al-Khazali, was released by American forces in early June and went into hiding in Baghdad.

Iraqi officials said at the time that the plan was for one British hostage to be released in return for Mr. Khazali, and for the process to continue with others held by the Americans being freed progressively as the Britons were released. One of those still held is Mr. Khazali’s brother Qais, believed to be the leader of the group that carried out the kidnappings, known as the Leagues of Righteousness. [indeed] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Spain Is Open to Bolstering Forces in Afghanistan

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30zapatero.html
July 30, 2009
Spain Is Open to Bolstering Forces in Afghanistan
By VICTORIA BURNETT and RACHEL DONADIO [Spain] [Madrid?] [EU] [both Spanish and British govts wrestling with popular opinion against Afghanistan] [followup] [interesting how Spain is attempting to do the right thing—it’s not particularly surprising with the UK given the US-UK special relationship; but when socialist PM Zapatero publicly agonizes over doing right thing by US, it’s rather interesting to watch] [remember the Spain (not the Maine)—our next Europe trip includes Spain] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
MADRID — Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said Wednesday that Spain was willing to increase its troops on long-term assignment in Afghanistan, in what appeared to be a gesture of support to the Obama administration.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30zapatero.html
July 30, 2009
Spain Is Open to Bolstering Forces in Afghanistan
By VICTORIA BURNETT and RACHEL DONADIO [Spain] [Madrid?] [EU] [both Spanish and British govts wrestling with popular opinion against Afghanistan] [followup] [interesting how Spain is attempting to do the right thing—it’s not particularly surprising with the UK given the US-UK special relationship; but when socialist PM Zapatero publicly agonizes over doing right thing by US, it’s rather interesting to watch] [remember the Spain (not the Maine)—our next Europe trip includes Spain] [use psci350] [use ir text] [*]
MADRID — Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero said Wednesday that Spain was willing to increase its troops on long-term assignment in Afghanistan, in what appeared to be a gesture of support to the Obama administration.

Spain’s Socialist government has long resisted calls from the United States and other NATO allies to increase its Afghan force. [*]

Mr. Zapatero said the move could be achieved by prolonging a temporary deployment of forces that had been sent to help with security in Afghanistan ahead of the Aug. 20 presidential election.

“We’ve always been willing to provide additional troops in order to support elections, as we are doing currently,” Mr. Zapatero said in an interview in his office in the Moncloa Palace here. “And if there is the need to sustain a greater number of presences in Afghanistan, we are willing to do so.” [most Europeans apparently hold out the same sort of hope for August elections coming up in about 3 weeks] [let’s hope they are right to be holding out said hope] [*]

Spain, which is to assume the rotating presidency of the European Union in January, has about 800 troops in Afghanistan, mostly in Herat and Badghis Provinces, in the country’s northwest. It recently sent an additional contingent of 450 soldiers to provide extra security before the election. [UK, still the country with the 2nd largest number is somewhat over 11 times with some 9,000] [*]

“I think they are working in an area where their contribution is positively acknowledged, and we will be willing to sustain our efforts in the future if so required,” said Mr. Zapatero.

Still, Spain’s troop levels are about a third the size of France’s or Germany’s, in a combined NATO force of 64,000. Mr. Zapatero was one of Europe’s harshest critics of the Bush administration, and especially of the war in Iraq, although Spain has maintained a presence in Afghanistan since 2002.

The move toward an increased troop presence seemed intended to address the Obama administration’s request for help in Afghanistan.

President Obama has been working to shift the American military focus from Iraq to Afghanistan, where the United States has been fighting militants from the Taliban and Al Qaeda for nearly eight years.

“Things have changed an awful lot,” Mr. Zapatero said. “I think Obama is a person who listens. I think he’s humble enough to understand, and humble enough to understand the diversity and complexity of the world, in terms of cultures, terms of ways of living, in terms of religions, in terms of different perspectives on a world order.”
“It’s not so much a question of what Obama can do for us, but what we can do for Obama,” Mr. Zapatero said.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Arrests of Sunni Leaders Rise in Baghdad

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30adhamiya.html
July 30, 2009
Arrests of Sunni Leaders Rise in Baghdad
By ROD NORDLAND [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s Shi’a majority government which promised integration of the Sunni jihadis-insurgents Patraeues bought off a couple years ago] [this thing has always been a ticking timebomb has I have elaborated repeatedly in these pages] [*]
BAGHDAD — The Baghdad police still do not enter the hard-line Sunni neighborhood of Adhamiya, which continues to suffer an insurgent attack every couple of days. [that’s somewhat intolerable but al Maliki might be able to hold off a while longer] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30adhamiya.html
July 30, 2009
Arrests of Sunni Leaders Rise in Baghdad
By ROD NORDLAND [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s Shi’a majority government which promised integration of the Sunni jihadis-insurgents Patraeues bought off a couple years ago] [this thing has always been a ticking timebomb has I have elaborated repeatedly in these pages] [*]
BAGHDAD — The Baghdad police still do not enter the hard-line Sunni neighborhood of Adhamiya, which continues to suffer an insurgent attack every couple of days. [that’s somewhat intolerable but al Maliki might be able to hold off a while longer] [*]

The Iraqi Army mans checkpoints here, but usually jointly with neighborhood volunteers from the Awakening movement, which is made up mostly of former Sunni insurgents who changed sides and helped reduce violence; it now fields as many as 900 paid fighters in Adhamiya. [when they work properly, Patreus looks like pure genius; if-when they demand more than their proportions would justify, look for rapid decent and Patraeus to look like goat] [*]

But in little more than a week, the Iraqi Army’s 42nd Brigade has arrested seven Awakening leaders in Adhamiya, a neighborhood in north Baghdad. The second in command, Riyadh Abdul Hadi, was arrested on July 21, along with four of his followers, and last Sunday, the group’s security chief, Ghassan Muttar, and a local neighborhood leader, Abdul Khadir, were also arrested, three Awakening leaders in Adhamiya said.

The Iraqi government, which has been deeply suspicious of the Awakening movement for arming former insurgents, made no announcement of the Adhamiya arrests. They may well be another telltale sign of the dwindling influence the United States has over the Iraqi government now that American troops no longer dominate Baghdad. [all of this was predictable and I’m sure Patraeus and team gamed some of these contingencies out; I suspect there’s some crossed fingers and the like involved] [*]

In March and April, at least two dozen Awakening leaders were arrested, along with many more of their followers. The arrests apparently subsided in May, after strong expressions of concern from American officials. The recent arrests are the first known ones since American troops withdrew from cities and towns on June 30.

American military commanders at the highest levels have promised to track the arrests of Awakening leaders, and in some cases have intervened to win their release. [*] American military officials declined to comment on the arrests. In the past, officials have stressed that arrests represented only a small portion of the 90,000 Awakening members throughout Iraq. [after US leaves—if the US is luck it will be after—this reckoning will occur] [*]

Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, a Shiite, has called Awakening members patriots and said that only those who have committed new crimes will be arrested. The Awakening leaders in Adhamiya are deeply skeptical. “We thought what we did for this area would win some place in the hearts of Iraqi officials, but it hasn’t,” one of the leaders said. “This place was a jungle before us.”

Many Adhamiya Awakening leaders have been attacked by Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, a largely Iraqi organization with some foreign leadership. [*]Last year a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest approached one of the local founders of the Awakening, then hugged him while detonating his vest. When other Awakening members arrived at the scene, another suicide bomber, this time in a car, drove into their midst and set off explosives, killing 13 more. Twenty-five of the Adhamiya fighters have been killed so far in insurgent attacks.

Two Awakening leaders were interviewed recently in a storefront that one of them used as a base; both spoke on the condition of anonymity, saying they feared provoking the Iraqi Army into arresting them. [*]

Their fighters stood guard outside and along the road; outsiders to Adhamiya still draw attention from residents.

“A month ago I was ready to quit,” one of the leaders said, complaining that since the Iraqi Army took over from the Americans, their pay has often been delayed, and Iraqi soldiers have often treated them contemptuously. He was persuaded by a community leader to be patient and remain in the group.

“We have sacrificed our blood here, so how can we quit?” the second leader said. He said he had narrowly escaped an assassination attempt just four months ago when a roadside bomb was detonated as he passed by.

The other leader said: “The Americans created the Awakening movement here. Before June 30th, when we had a problem, we could go to them and they would fix it. Now we don’t have anyone to talk to, we’re just hanging out in the streets.” [like often happens with such confections, they are twisting in the wind] [*]

The leaders said that local Iraqi Army commanders held a meeting with Awakening members in Adhamiya early this week, attended by an American officer, to assure them they were not singling out the organization. The army commanders said they were just arresting individuals charged with new offenses, rather than crimes committed when Adhamiya was an insurgent stronghold. In those days, the local American base was called Fort Apache.

The commanders did not, however, reveal what those offenses were. “When the Americans were here, they would have told us the reasons and then everyone would calm down,” the second leader said. “Now they tell us nothing.”

Sheik Sabah al-Mashadani, the overall leader of the Adhamiya Awakening, said in an interview at his home that he was unconcerned, even at the arrest of his deputy. The judicial investigation will determine whether he is guilty, he said.

Under the Iraqi legal system, suspects are arrested and then a judge supervises an investigation before determining whether the charges were justified. That process often takes many months.

“We don’t want these arrests to make any unrest in the neighborhood,” the sheik said. “Since the Iraqi Army took over authority for us, we became part of the Iraqi security system, and like any other Iraqi employee, we are subject to our employer’s discipline.”
Riyadh Mohammed contributed reporting.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iraqi Raid Poses Problem for U.S.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902969.html
Iraqi Raid Poses Problem for U.S.
Fighting Continues at Camp for Iran Exiles
By Ernesto Londoño
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [what appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s govt increasingly taking up its own security needs has just sent a shot across the bow of America while cleaning out an a group whose purpose includes overthrow of Tehran regime] [while it appears a cozy situation with Iran I’m not sure that’s its nature] [*]
BAGHDAD, July 29 -- Violent clashes continued for a second day Wednesday between Iraqi troops and members of an Iranian opposition group whose camp the Iraqis stormed Tuesday, [*]presenting the first major dilemma for the U.S. government since

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/29/AR2009072902969.html
Iraqi Raid Poses Problem for U.S.
Fighting Continues at Camp for Iran Exiles
By Ernesto Londoño
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, July 30, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [what appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s govt increasingly taking up its own security needs has just sent a shot across the bow of America while cleaning out an a group whose purpose includes overthrow of Tehran regime] [while it appears a cozy situation with Iran I’m not sure that’s its nature] [*]
BAGHDAD, July 29 -- Violent clashes continued for a second day Wednesday between Iraqi troops and members of an Iranian opposition group whose camp the Iraqis stormed Tuesday, [*]presenting the first major dilemma for the U.S. government since Iraq proclaimed its sovereignty a month ago.

At least eight Iranians have been killed and 400 wounded since Tuesday, when hundreds of Iraqi police and soldiers in riot gear plowed into Camp Ashraf, [*]northeast of Baghdad, using Humvees donated by the U.S. military, according to group leaders and Abdul Nasir al-Mahdawi, the governor of Diyala province.

Camp residents described the day's events as a massacre and the aftermath as a tense stalemate.

Behzad Saffari, a leader of the Mujaheddin-e Khalq, or MEK, said that Iraqi troops were preventing gravely injured people from being taken to hospitals outside the group's camp and that residents feared soldiers would storm their living quarters.

"We have 1,000 women," he said. "This is our main concern now."

The raid, ordered by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, coincided with an unannounced visit by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who left Iraq [*]on Wednesday.

In Washington, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton described the raid as a legitimate act by a sovereign nation. "Although the U.S. government remains engaged and concerned about this issue, it is a matter for the government of Iraq to resolve in accordance with its laws," she said.

Clinton said Iraq had given assurances that camp residents would be treated humanely and would not be relocated anywhere they would have a well-founded fear of persecution. She urged the Iraqis to "show restraint."

U.S. officials are deeply concerned about the reports of violence and have been monitoring the situation using camera-equipped unmanned aircraft, said an official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "We're asking the Iraqis questions," the official said. "Sometimes they answer, sometimes they don't."

A contingent of U.S. soldiers based outside Ashraf have been watching but have declined to intervene, [why would they?] [this is a group that used –ir territory for safe harbor after raids into Iran—in short, -ir under the Bush Doctrine, can not be distinguished from terrorists] [*] residents said.

The raid and its aftermath represent a conundrum for U.S. officials. Some say they feel obligated to the MEK because its members have provided information about Iran's nuclear program and because American officials vowed to protect them after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. But condemning this week's events could be seen as an affront to Maliki's government just as U.S. officials are talking up Iraq's sovereignty, proclaimed June 30 when American troops withdrew from cities.

The stated goal of the Ashraf operation was to set up an Iraqi police station inside the camp, a move Iraq has described as the first step toward evicting the more than 3,000 residents.

Iraqi government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh defended the raid Wednesday, telling the Associated Press that the government "intends to assert its sovereignty on all sites and facilities that were controlled by foreign troops, and Camp Ashraf is no exception."

"The Iraqi government doesn't intend to clash with members of this camp," he said, "but it will defend the law decisively."

Tehran officials have long pressured the Baghdad government to expel the MEK, which seeks to overthrow Iran's Islamic regime. But Iraq has held off from raiding the camp because of U.S. opposition to a violent takeover.

An Iraqi police commander who participated in the raid said the Iranians' fierce resistance had startled the Iraqi security forces. When the Iraqis gathered outside the gate, throngs of MEK members, led by women, formed a human shield, said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "They put the women in front to prevent us from entering. They hit us with rocks and knives." [why doesn’t –ir bann them from its territory?] [*]

The official said 45 troops were injured. Residents at the camp said they did not provoke the forces.

After nearly four hours, the official said, the Iraqis set up a police station and checkpoints inside the camp and raised an Iraqi flag.

The State Department classifies the MEK as a terrorist organization, but Washington has interacted with the group since it agreed to disarm in 2003 in return for U.S. military protection. [the Obama administration ought not to have continued relations with this group—they are thugs even though they are agains the thugocracy in Tehran] [the US gets into trouble repeatedly when it uses only the “enemy of my enemy is my friend” criterion] [*] The Baghdad government assumed nominal control of the perimeter of the camp Jan. 1, when a U.S.-Iraqi security agreement took effect.
Special correspondent Aziz Alwan contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Tehran Combines Clemency and Toughness

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30iran.html
July 30, 2009
Tehran Combines Clemency and Toughness
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Iranian authorities sent a mixed message of clemency and firmness on Wednesday, saying that more detainees arrested in the post-election crackdown would soon be freed, but also that 20 protesters charged with

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/middleeast/30iran.html
July 30, 2009
Tehran Combines Clemency and Toughness
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Iranian authorities sent a mixed message of clemency and firmness on Wednesday, saying that more detainees arrested in the post-election crackdown would soon be freed, but also that 20 protesters charged with serious crimes would be put on trial, [*] starting this weekend. [probably not a bad tactic—cull the herd—but will it work in this case with so much anger and the thugocracy having slipped so far??] [stay tunned] [*]

There were also new arrests, including those of two prominent reformists, Saeed Shariati and Shayesteh Amiri, opposition Web sites reported. Separately, an “underground network providing foreign media outlets with photos and footage of the post-election unrest” has been identified and its members arrested, the state-run Press TV reported, citing security forces. [*]

The report said that the network was made up of “pro-reform extremists” and that at least two members had confessed to providing images of the unrest to Western news media in an effort to “stage a regime change” in Iran. The Iranian leadership has blamed foreign media for riots and rallies after the disputed June 12 presidential election.

On Tuesday, the authorities released 140 detainees, amid accusations that jailed protesters had been tortured and killed. Prominent conservatives and senior clerics have joined the opposition in denouncing the abuses, and the release of the detainees appeared to be part of a government effort to defuse the issue. [*]

Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri, a dissident and one of Iran’s most senior clerics, issued a fierce statement on Wednesday on his Web site, saying the government’s closing of one notorious detention center was not enough. “Was the shah able to resist the protests by jailing, torturing, extracting confessions and lying?” he said, referring to the fall of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi in the 1979 revolution. [**]

There were more conciliatory gestures from the government on Wednesday, with Iran’s top police official, Brig. Gen. Ismail Ahmadi-Moqaddam, saying some officers “went to extremes” and caused damage during the post-election protests, [there it is: some of the fellow rats trying to escape what they perceive as a sinking (stinking) ship?] [*] Press TV reported. The prosecutor general of Iran, Ayatollah Qorban-Ali Dorri-Najafabadi, said that more detainees would soon be released and that a “serious judicial inquiry” was being conducted into prison deaths after the election, Iranian news agencies reported.

But the authorities have also said that their clemency is limited, and that protesters who crossed the line will be punished. The 20 protesters whose trial is scheduled to start this weekend are charged with “attacking military units and universities, sending pictures to enemy media, carrying firearms and explosives, organizing thugs and rioters, and vandalizing public property,” state television reported.

A mourning ceremony is planned for Thursday to honor those killed in the unrest. Although the Interior Ministry has denied permission for a gathering, the opposition leaders Mir Hussein Moussavi and Mehdi Karroubi announced Wednesday that the ceremony would be held in the Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery in Tehran.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has also drawn criticism from fellow hard-liners after he refused to obey a command from Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to drop a controversial deputy from his cabinet. [though that seems over] [*]
Robert F. Worth reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Nazila Fathi from Toronto.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iranian Police Move to Break Up Mourning Ceremony

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31iran.html
July 31, 2009
Iranian Police Move to Break Up Mourning Ceremony
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Riot police officers ordered the Iranian opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi to leave a contentious mourning ceremony on Thursday commemorating those killed in the unrest [*]after Iran’s disputed presidential election, news reports said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/31/world/middleeast/31iran.html
July 31, 2009
Iranian Police Move to Break Up Mourning Ceremony
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [since showdown between Ahmadinjad and his master, the theocracy slowly clawing its way back into control] [followup] [but the concessions thugocracy has made have weakened it so it’s trying to reflex a slightly atrophied muscle] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Riot police officers ordered the Iranian opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi to leave a contentious mourning ceremony on Thursday commemorating those killed in the unrest [*]after Iran’s disputed presidential election, news reports said.

Quoting unidentified witnesses, news reports said Mr. Moussavi went to the Behesht-e-Zahra cemetery on Tehran’s southern outskirts to commemorate the dead, including Neda Agha-Soltan, a young woman who was shot to death in postelection violence. Amateur video showing her bleeding to death had become a global icon of resistance to the electoral victory claimed by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after the June 12 elections. [*]

News reports said hundreds of people gathered around Ms. Agha-Soltan’s grave as Mr. Moussavi arrived at the cemetery. The police forced him to return to his car before he could offer prayers. He drove off as arguments broke out between mourners and police, [*] these reports said.

The crowd continued to swell after Mr. Moussavi left, growing to several thousand, some chanting Mr. Moussavi’s name and “death to the dictator,” according to videos posted on the Internet and witness [*]accounts reported by The Associated Press. When another opposition leader, reformist cleric Mehdi Karroubi, attempted to give a speech, the police moved in, firing tear gas and swinging wooden batons. Other news reports said there were additional clashes with police.

Witnesses said mourners later tried to gather at the Grand Mosala, a large prayer venue in central Tehran, but the police had gathered in force. Opposition Web sites reported fierce clashes between demonstrators and the police, with tear gas and beatings, and witnesses said some demonstrators were arrested.

The authorities had denied permission to hold any formal mourning ceremonies.

Earlier Thursday, the police arrested two prominent Iranian filmmakers when they tried to lay flowers at Ms. Agha-Soltan’s grave, The A.P. said. One of them was Jafar Panahi, best known for his film, “The Circle,” which was critical of the treatment of women under the Islamist government and was banned in Iran. [*]A female associate and documentary maker, Mahnaz Mohammadi, was arrested with him, The A.P. said.

Thursday was a day of unusual symbolic importance because 40 days have passed since the shooting of Ms. Agha-Soltan. The 40th day marks an important Shiite mourning ritual, and similar commemorations for dead protesters fueled the demonstrations that led to the Islamic Revolution in 1979. [I haven’t read what significance but it’s been made clear that the 40th day of mourning is significant in Shi’a theology(?)] [*]

The Iranian authorities have been releasing dozens of the hundreds held in the postelection crackdown, but they have also continued with arrests. On Wednesday, the authorities said that 20 protesters charged with serious crimes would be put on trial, starting this weekend.

On Wednesday, the police arrested two additional prominent reformists, Saeed Shariati and Shayesteh Amiri, opposition Web sites reported. Separately, an “underground network providing foreign media outlets with photos and footage of the post-election unrest” was identified and its members arrested, state-run Press TV reported, citing security forces.

The report said that the network was made up of “pro-reform extremists” and that at least two members had confessed to providing images of the unrest to Western news media in an effort to “stage a regime change” in Iran. The Iranian leadership has blamed foreign news outlets for encouraging the riots and rallies.

On Tuesday, the authorities released 140 detainees, amid accusations that jailed protesters had been tortured and killed. Prominent conservatives and senior clerics have joined the opposition in denouncing the abuses, and the release of the detainees appeared to be part of a government effort to defuse the issue.

Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri, a dissident and one of Iran’s most senior clerics, issued a fierce statement on Wednesday on his Web site, saying the government’s closing of one notorious detention center was not enough. “Was the shah able to resist the protests by jailing, torturing, extracting confessions and lying?” [oh my!] [*] he said, referring to the fall of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi in the 1979 revolution.

There were more conciliatory gestures from the government on Wednesday, with Iran’s top police official, Brig. Gen. Ismail Ahmadi-Moqaddam, saying some officers “went to extremes” and caused damage during the post-election protests, Press TV reported. The prosecutor general of Iran, Ayatollah Qorban-Ali Dorri-Najafabadi, said that more detainees would soon be released and that a “serious judicial inquiry” was being conducted into prison deaths after the election, Iranian news agencies reported.

But the authorities have also said that their clemency is limited, and that protesters who crossed the line will be punished. The 20 protesters whose trial is scheduled to start this weekend are charged with “attacking military units and universities, sending pictures to enemy media, carrying firearms and explosives, organizing thugs and rioters, and vandalizing public property,” state television reported.
Robert F. Worth reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and Nazila Fathi from Toronto. Alan Cowell contributed reporting from Paris, and Sharon Otterman from New York.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Pakistan Judge Says He Won’t Try Musharraf for Treason

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/07/30/world/international-uk-pakistan-musharraf.html
July 30, 2009
Pakistan Judge Says He Won’t Try Musharraf for Treason
By REUTERS
Filed at 7:54 a.m. ET [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [former President Musharraf and his legal problems (among other things his coup d’etat to get into office in 1999)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's top judge turned down a request Thursday to launch a treason case against former military ruler Pervez Musharraf, saying the Supreme

http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2009/07/30/world/international-uk-pakistan-musharraf.html
July 30, 2009
Pakistan Judge Says He Won’t Try Musharraf for Treason
By REUTERS
Filed at 7:54 a.m. ET [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [former President Musharraf and his legal problems (among other things his coup d’etat to get into office in 1999)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD (Reuters) - Pakistan's top judge turned down a request Thursday to launch a treason case against former military ruler Pervez Musharraf, saying the Supreme Court lacked the authority. [*]

Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry's remarks could reassure both the fragile civilian government and military establishment, as they can ill-afford any fresh crisis at a time when the country is fighting a Taliban insurgency in parts of the northwest. [the very person Musharraf shitcanned fired which created a terrible row eventually leading to Zardari] [*]

"This is not the proper forum to initiate such case. We are not authorised to do so," Chaudhry told the court.

Musharraf was forced to quit as president almost a year ago to avoid impeachment and has been living in London for the past two months. [*] [just to be on safe side both legally and security] [*]

Hamid Khan, a lawyer who was at the forefront of a movement to oust Musharraf, asked a panel of 14 judges led by Chaudhry to begin treason proceedings on grounds that the general had seized power in a coup in 1999 and violated the constitution to extend his rule in 2007.

Musharraf declared emergency rule in November 2007 and purged the Supreme Court of judges, including chief justice Chaudhry, who might have ruled illegal his re-election while still army chief.

The court last week ordered Musharraf to explain allegations that he appointed new judges under emergency rule in violation of the constitution, but Musharraf and his lawyers have stayed away from the hearings.

President Asif Ali Zardari has had his own reasons to be wary of Chaudhry, as he and his late wife, former prime minister Benazir Bhutto, were only able to return to Pakistan in late 2007 after Musharraf issued an amnesty that protected them from prosecution in old graft cases.

Zardari reluctantly reinstated the chief justice in March to avert a political crisis that could have ended his own presidency. [*] [Shariff insisted on it Zardari evade it until it blew up]

The army, which stepped back from politics after Musharraf's ouster, would loath to be dragged into the controversy, but nor would it want to see an old chief humiliated.

Generals have ruled Pakistan for more than half its history since the Muslim state was carved out of the partition of India in 1947, and many people believe they should be held accountable for their actions if democratic institutions are to grow.
Others believe embarking on old vendettas will only create fresh crises at a time when the country needs to move forward.
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
Copyright 2009 Reuters Ltd.

Pakistan Injects Precision Into Air War on Taliban

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30pstan.html
July 30, 2009
Pakistan Injects Precision Into Air War on Taliban
By ERIC SCHMITT [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [Pakistan’s airforce learning invaluable lessons in their strikes against jihadis, following US leads (India cannot be please with Paksitan’s progress?)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan’s Air Force is improving its ability to pinpoint and attack militant targets with precision weapons, adding a new dimension to the country’s fight against violent extremism, [*]according to Pakistani military officials and independent analysts.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/asia/30pstan.html
July 30, 2009
Pakistan Injects Precision Into Air War on Taliban
By ERIC SCHMITT [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [Pakistan’s airforce learning invaluable lessons in their strikes against jihadis, following US leads (India cannot be please with Paksitan’s progress?)] [usepsci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Pakistan’s Air Force is improving its ability to pinpoint and attack militant targets with precision weapons, adding a new dimension to the country’s fight against violent extremism, [*]according to Pakistani military officials and independent analysts.

The Pakistani military has moved away from the scorched-earth artillery and air tactics used last year against insurgents in the Bajaur tribal agency. [thank god as this alienated the people something fearsome] [*] In recent months, the air force has shifted from using Google Earth to sophisticated images from spy planes and other surveillance aircraft, and has increased its use of laser-guided bombs. [*]

The changes reflect an effort by the Pakistani military to conduct its operations in a way that will not further alienate the population by increasing civilian casualties and destroying property. But they are also dictated by necessity as the military takes its campaign into areas where it is reluctant to commit ground troops, particularly in the rugged terrain of Waziristan, [*]where it had suffered heavy losses.

Military analysts say the airstrikes alone cannot ultimately substitute for ground forces or for better counterinsurgency training. But they say the airstrikes have become a valuable tool for Pakistan in fighting the Taliban and Al Qaeda [something that hitherto only the US did] [*] in sometimes inaccessible terrain.

Since May, F-16 multirole fighter jets have flown more than 300 combat missions against militants in the Swat Valley and more than 100 missions in South Waziristan, attacking mountain hide-outs, training centers and ammunition depots, [*]Pakistani military officials said.

In conjunction with infantry fire, artillery barrages and helicopter gunship attacks, military officials say, the air combat missions reinvigorated the military campaign in Swat and have put increasing pressure on the leader of the Pakistani Taliban, Baitullah Mehsud, in South Waziristan. [hurting the Taliban (at least Mehsud tribe) and doubtless doing same to al Qaeda and other global jihadis] [*]

Interviews with Pakistani fighter pilots and senior commanders offered a rare window into this other air war — a much larger but less heralded campaign that runs parallel to the three dozen secret missile strikes carried out this year by Central Intelligence Agency drones in Pakistan’s lawless tribal areas. [here the CIA has success and can hardly bragg about it which is a shame but in the US they are in so much trouble over other stuff that nobody cares to listen] [*]

The air force’s new tools and tactics have several sources. The air force has without fanfare accepted some American assistance, like sophisticated surveillance equipment and high-grade images.

But sensitive to anti-American fervor in the country, Pakistani officials have refused most outside aid, developing a small corps of ground spotters largely on their own, [that’s plain silly as they most certainly have borrowed US tactics] [that they wish to circulate a cover story is fine] [*] and occasionally tapping the Internet for online assistance.

Pakistani officials are urging the Obama administration to lease Pakistan upgraded F-16s, until its own new fighters are delivered in the next year or two. This would allow Pakistani pilots to fly night missions, impossible with their current aircraft. [this will again cause trouble with India?] [*]

Pakistan has argued that it needs the more advanced versions of the F-16 to more effectively battle the Taliban insurgency. In the past, American officials raised concerns that Pakistan’s arms purchases and troop deployments were geared mainly to bolstering its ability to fight its traditional enemy to the east, India. “Of course, there is a real threat from India,” Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman, Pakistan’s air force chief of staff, said in an interview at his headquarters here. “But right now we have to tackle the threat from the militants.”

Nearly every day in the past few months, Pakistani warplanes have pummeled militant targets in the contested Swat Valley and South Waziristan. [*]The campaigns are a big change from operations in Bajaur last fall.

“The biggest handicap we had in Bajaur was that we didn’t have good imagery,” Air Chief Marshal Qamar said. “We didn’t have good target descriptions. We did not know the area. We were forced to use Google Earth. [well gee boys, I wonder where the accurate imagery comes from: US IC, NSA, NGIA, NRO, etc] [*]

“I didn’t want to face a similar situation in Swat,” he said.

In advance of the Swat campaign, the air force equipped about 10 F-16s with high-resolution, infrared sensors, provided by the United States, to conduct detailed reconnaissance of the entire valley. [bingo] [and there’s no better than when the US involves the entire weight of its massive IC capabilities] [they know where a log broken in 12 pieces lies down to the awkward knots] [*]

The United States has also resumed secret drone flights performing military surveillance in the tribal areas, to provide Pakistani commanders with a wide array of videos [*]and other information on militants, according to American officials. [this other stuff is 3-d imagining with gaze-in capabilities (I don’t remember exactly what they call it); it’s not exactly see-through but it’s getting there] [*]

In most cases, officials said, the Pakistani Army provides target information to the air force, which confirms the locations on newly detailed maps. Identifying high-value targets through the use of army spotters or, in some cases, a new, small group of specially trained air force spotters, the air force was able to increase its use of laser-guided bombs to 80 percent of munitions used in Swat, from about 40 percent in Bajaur, Air Chief Marshal Qamar said. [*]

Another change was the mass evacuation of civilians. About two million people were displaced, sometimes with only a few hours’ notice, as part of an effort to get civilians out of conflict areas to reduce their casualties.

Some American officials voice skepticism about Pakistani claims of success. “We don’t have access to battle-damage assessment or the information on the actual strike execution, so we cannot make a qualitative comparison of what the intended effect was versus the actual effect,” [there’s no question that they are exaggerating but they are also kicking butt in ways they’ve never seen before (stuff the US routinely does) and they are understandably stoked] [*] said an American adviser, who spoke on condition of anonymity, to avoid jeopardizing his job.

Officials of human rights organizations say the military has not been able to eliminate all civilian casualties from airstrikes and ground fire, but they agree that the numbers are down.

“Certainly, the level of civilian casualties in this phase of the conflict has been lower than in previous operations in the tribal areas,” [and that’s good for all of us] [*] said Ali Dayan Hasan, senior South Asia researcher for Human Rights Watch, based in Lahore, Pakistan.

The air force still operates under limitations. Because the F-16s are equipped to fly only by day, the militants move and conduct operations at night. Indeed, not one of the 21 main militant leaders in Swat has been killed or captured, [they move at night as a matter of course and unless-until the US floods the battle field around the clock that won’t change] [Pakistanis are exceptionally sensitive about being seen as dependent on the US so there’s tension and the permission for the US to flood the battlefield 24/7 will be slow and tentative] [*] Pakistani officials acknowledge. In addition, the Pakistani jets cannot be refueled in midair, as American fighters can, limiting how long they can remain over a target area.

In South Waziristan, as the army mulls a ground war, the air force continues to attack militants’ hide-outs and training camps as well as storage caves and tunnels with 500-pound and 2,000-pound bombs.

“We’re still developing our plans for South Waziristan,” Air Chief Marshal Qamar said. “We are preparing to ramp up. I think Baitullah Mehsud is getting the message, and the message is, if he keeps doing these things, we’ll hit him.” [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

July 29, 2009

Honduras: Officials’ Diplomatic Visas Revoked

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/americas/29briefs-Honduras.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Honduras: Officials’ Diplomatic Visas Revoked
By MARC LACEY [obama white house] [Obama foreign policy] [mostly this administration’s own turf] [bureaucracy] [Latin America] [use psci350, 355] [Honduras and the messy coup d’etat] [US and OAS on same page but that, alas, put the US on same page as Hugo, Raul, and others whom the US doesn’t much enjoy embracing][*]
The State Department on Tuesday revoked the diplomatic visas of four Honduran officials linked to the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya a month ago, which has been

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/americas/29briefs-Honduras.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Honduras: Officials’ Diplomatic Visas Revoked
By MARC LACEY [obama white house] [Obama foreign policy] [mostly this administration’s own turf] [bureaucracy] [Latin America] [use psci350, 355] [Honduras and the messy coup d’etat] [US and OAS on same page but that, alas, put the US on same page as Hugo, Raul, and others whom the US doesn’t much enjoy embracing][*]
The State Department on Tuesday revoked the diplomatic visas of four Honduran officials linked to the ouster of President Manuel Zelaya a month ago, which has been criticized internationally as a coup. [*]A State Department spokesman, Ian Kelly, declined to identify the officials but Honduran officials identified two of them as Tomás Arita, a Supreme Court justice who signed the detention order that led to Mr. Zelaya’s removal by the military, and José Alfredo Saavedra, president of Congress. [*]The visas of other officials in the de facto government, which is not recognized by Washington, were also under review, Mr. Kelly said.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

China Seeks Assurances That U.S. Will Cut Its Deficit

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/29strategy.html
July 29, 2009
China Seeks Assurances That U.S. Will Cut Its Deficit
By MARK LANDLER and DAVID E. SANGER [obama white house] [Obama foreign policy] [and the mess he inherited from Bush who inherited it from Clinton who inherieted it from . . . ?] [mostly bureaucracy] [China as America’s financier] [was once Japan but Japan fell by the road; a more robuts economy was needed to fund America’s wild spending habits] [use psci350, 355] [surely vetted at NSC-NEC levels] [China appears to be flexing its newly found muscular frame; but probably more desperation pleading that marching orders] [America’s fiscal mess and rolling it over from one adminstration to the next to the next] [*]
WASHINGTON — China sought and received assurances from the Obama administration that the United States would reduce its budget deficit once an economic

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/29strategy.html
July 29, 2009
China Seeks Assurances That U.S. Will Cut Its Deficit
By MARK LANDLER and DAVID E. SANGER [obama white house] [Obama foreign policy] [and the mess he inherited from Bush who inherited it from Clinton who inherieted it from . . . ?] [mostly bureaucracy] [China as America’s financier] [was once Japan but Japan fell by the road; a more robuts economy was needed to fund America’s wild spending habits] [use psci350, 355] [surely vetted at NSC-NEC levels] [China appears to be flexing its newly found muscular frame; but probably more desperation pleading that marching orders] [America’s fiscal mess and rolling it over from one adminstration to the next to the next] [*]
WASHINGTON — China sought and received assurances from the Obama administration that the United States would reduce its budget deficit once an economic recovery was under way, [you can be this was circulated through the political shops] [*] a senior Chinese official said Tuesday at the end of two days of high-level talks between the countries.

“Attention should be given to the fiscal deficit,” said Xie Xuren, the Chinese finance minister. He said Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner had assured the Chinese that once the economy rebounded, the deficit would gradually come down from its current record levels.

Mr. Geithner confirmed that, saying, “As we put in place conditions for a durable recovery led by private demand, we will bring our fiscal position down to a more sustainable level over time.” [*]

For China, the rising American deficit is a concern because it could weaken the dollar and put at risk China’s vast holdings of Treasury securities and other dollar-based assets. China holds an estimated $1.5 trillion in such securities, making it the United States’ largest foreign creditor.

The unusual exchange between American and Chinese officials, in consecutive news conferences at the conclusion of the so-called Strategic and Economic Dialogue, underscored a subtle shift in power between China and the United States, one in which the Chinese are showing a new assertiveness as they seek to protect their huge “investment.

President Obama’s decision to combine the longstanding economic dialogue between the countries with a strategic one meant that while finance officials tried to get their economic policies in line, diplomats were doing the same, especially on the North Korean nuclear program. [sounds like good ol’ fashioned horse trading] [*]

China’s vice foreign minister, Wang Guangya, was unusually strong in condemning North Korea for conducting a nuclear test in May, and said Beijing would “seriously and faithfully implement” a series of sanctions enacted by the United Nations Security Council. His bluntness was striking; even two years ago, China was circumspect about publicly criticizing the North. [China knows it has a Frankenstein monster on its southeaster border] [there’s a sizable prison camp (50,000 plus) that appears to be within a couple hundred klicks from the border] [and for years the rumors have been the DPRK loaths ethnic Chinese and does little to hide it] [after years of the crap China puts up with from the Dear Leader, this surely grates considerably] [*]

But Mr. Wang was not specific about what steps China had taken to crack down on financial transactions, or to inspect North Korean cargo transshipped through China’s ports, and he talked about coming up with a new series of incentives for the North to return to negotiations.

While some in the Obama administration have also discussed incentives, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has warned that the United States will not “buy the same horse” a second time. He was referring to the Bush administration’s decision to take the North off the list of state sponsors of terrorism and to resume oil shipments to the country when it began to dismantle parts of its nuclear plant. [*]
North Korea is now reassembling that plant, and the administration is in the midst of a complex dance with the Chinese to force stronger steps.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

White House Still Has a Vacancy for a Lesser Czar

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802903.html
White House Still Has a Vacancy for a Lesser Czar
By Al Kamen
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [obama white house] [NSC] [NSC principals, deputies, regular staffer] [post-IRTPA changes] [new administration—counter role expectations?] [apparently collapsed the homeland security council—that is NSC level—back into the NSC] [use NSC] [use psci355, 455] [ditto, the cybersecurity “czar” that’s been in the news for a couple of months now] [command in military but the czar liaisons with both NSC and NEC] [use NSC] [*]
In an East Room speech at the end of May, President Obama declared a new "strategic national asset": the computer networks our country depends on to keep trains running and planes from colliding, to control weapons systems and allow banks to process

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802903.html
White House Still Has a Vacancy for a Lesser Czar
By Al Kamen
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [obama white house] [NSC] [NSC principals, deputies, regular staffer] [post-IRTPA changes] [new administration—counter role expectations?] [apparently collapsed the homeland security council—that is NSC level—back into the NSC] [use NSC] [use psci355, 455] [ditto, the cybersecurity “czar” that’s been in the news for a couple of months now] [command in military but the czar liaisons with both NSC and NEC] [use NSC] [*]
In an East Room speech at the end of May, President Obama declared a new "strategic national asset": the computer networks our country depends on to keep trains running and planes from colliding, to control weapons systems and allow banks to process payments. He also promised to "personally" select a White House cybersecurity coordinator to advise him on all things cyber [yes, he did] [he seems to have got caught up in several other matters, such as TARP, automobiles, AfPak, detainees, and now health care!] [*] and to coordinate cyber-policies across the government.

Two months later, White House staffers have approached a number of prospects, but there’s still no white smoke, our colleague Ellen Nakashima reports, and several said “no thanks.” [well, at least they had someone] [but somebody surely screwed up when she said no—they are not supposed to offer it to people who say no] [*]

Those who have politely declined a prospective vetting include former Virginia congressman Tom Davis (R), Microsoft exec Scott Charney, Symantec Chairman John W. Thompson (whose interest was gauged months ago) and retired Air Force Gen. Harry D. Raduege Jr., a former director of the Defense Information Systems Agency. [the list is long but distinguished] [*]

What's not to like about being Obama's cyber-czar?

First, you're not really a czar, reporting as you would to national security adviser Jim Jones and White House economic adviser Larry Summers. "What real authority do you have?" said one of those who demurred. "Who's going to go to Jim Jones and say, 'This is what you need to do?'. . . Do you have the president behind you?" [translation: you have no budget to speak of; you have no ground troops; you don’t have automatic access to the president; in Washington parlor games, these things mean you are powerless] [that it might be important for the country is beside the point, sadly] [*]

Second, “It’s a huge, huge turf war. You have Defense fighting the Treasury fighting the intel groups fighting Homeland Security” for control, he said.

“The sheep,” said cyber-expert Jim Lewis, “don’t want a shepherd.”

Lewis described the job as “bag-holder in chief – if something bad happens, you’re responsible for cybersecurity, even if you don’t have the authority to pull it off.” [then negotiate presidential face time as part of your acceptance and get it in writing or the equivalent, Jim Jones blood] [*]

So far, CongressDaily reported Monday, former White House special adviser and longtime government computer security expert Howard Schmidt and former Clinton administration assistant defense secretary Frank Kramer are seen as front-runners for the job.

"The president is personally committed to finding the right person for this job, and a rigorous selection process is well underway," said White House spokesman Nick Shapiro. [absolute crap] [if true, the president would have reached out and touched someone] [it appears this incredibly important position will drift untilt he next crisis] [which is a real shame] [*]
USS Caffeine
One of the great benefits of working in the White House has got to be the perks. And one of the best perks may be the endless stream of soft drinks -- or pop, as we say in the Midwest -- both diet and sugared up, free for the taking at the White House mess. The drinks are provided by the Navy, which runs the mess.

These freebies are gratefully guzzled down by the White House staff, as they have been for at least the past 40 years. The government largess can save the addicted substantial sums of money. For example, let's pick a random staffer, say Office of Management and Budget Director Peter Orszag, known to be fond of diet drinks. Assume he's on the high-consumption end of the scale and drinks six Diet Cokes a day. (We hear it's 10, but that seems a lot.)

At a buck per drink, Orszag is saving $6 a day times six days a week -- like so many others, he takes his work seriously. So we're talking $36 a week or, subtracting a few weeks for vacation and travel, something approaching $1,500 a year in gifts, via the Navy, to the budget chief.

Well, it could be worse. Up until around the Nixon administration, we're told, the mess gave out free cigarettes.
Into the Records Fray
President Obama has nominated David S. Ferriero, chief executive of the research libraries at the New York Public Library, to be the archivist of the United States, a post that includes making sure highly sensitive presidential papers and electronic records are open and available to the public.

Before his New York job, Ferriero had been Duke University's librarian and had worked for 31 years before that in Massachusetts Institute of Technology libraries.

He succeeds Allen Weinstein, who resigned in December for health reasons.

The archivist job has become something of a lightning rod for controversy, particularly as various agencies and administrations press for keeping their records secret for decades despite strong pressures from historians and the public to declassify as much information as soon as possible. [probably knows where some important bodies are buried] [*]

The news comes two days before a scheduled House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on the National Archives and the lack of a permanent archivist.

The panel intends to question acting Archive officials about the disappearance of computer disks with information from the Clinton administration, including the Social Security numbers of several White House staffers and one of former vice president Al Gore's daughters.
Craig's New Gig
Keeping up with former senator Larry Craig (R-Idaho) . . . Craig, who made a Minneapolis airport bathroom a major tourist attraction, has opened a consulting firm focusing on energy issues, according to the Associated Press. Craig has an office in Eagle, Idaho, and another here in Washington. He formed the company, New West Strategies, with Mike Ware, his former chief of staff.
OSHA Chief Nominated
The White House said Tuesday that epidemiologist David Michaels, a research professor in the department of environmental and occupational health at George Washington University, is Obama's pick to be assistant secretary of labor for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
With Alice Crites
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Obama Faces Court Test Over Detainee

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/us/29gitmo.html
July 29, 2009
Obama Faces Court Test Over Detainee
By WILLIAM GLABERSON [Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
The fate of one of the youngest detainees at the Guantánamo Bay prison is emerging as a major test of whether the courts or the president has the final authority over when prisoners there are released. [I’m not at all sure the Bushies wanted to make their case

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/us/29gitmo.html
July 29, 2009
Obama Faces Court Test Over Detainee
By WILLIAM GLABERSON [Obama white house] [mostly bureaucracy] [holdover from the Bush white house] [gitmo and illegal enemy combatant intersection] [among a raft of other potential screwups, incarcerating a teenage boy for his radical Islamist politics] [at some point, it’s going to become public that you threw a kid in the hole—some might view it as rather unchristian-like response to admittedly intolerable behavior] [how many of the former administration’s cockups are these guys going to keep cleaning up?] [followup] [*]
The fate of one of the youngest detainees at the Guantánamo Bay prison is emerging as a major test of whether the courts or the president has the final authority over when prisoners there are released. [I’m not at all sure the Bushies wanted to make their case publicly about why the US was far better off without this kid on the loose] [in fact, it’s almost certain else they wouldn’t have buried the case so deeply as to effectively dissapear] [*]

After a federal judge said earlier this month that the government’s case for holding the detainee, Mohammed Jawad, was “riddled with holes,” the Obama administration conceded defeat and agreed that Mr. Jawad would no longer be considered a military detainee. But the administration said it would still hold him at the prison in Cuba for possible prosecution in the United States. [why they keep covering for the last administration is, frankly, a bit beyond me] [I understand executive privledge and not giving away any potential prerogatives and so on, but come on: what so of prerogative is it to throw a young kid in the brig for ever?] [there’s a reason why none of us remember any similar case from law schoool] [*]

On Tuesday, Mr. Jawad’s lawyers attacked that position, arguing that the government had given up any authority to hold him. “Enough is enough,” the lawyers said in legal papers that urged the judge, Ellen Segal Huvelle, to send him back to Afghanistan, which has requested his return.

Within hours, the judge scheduled a hearing for Thursday morning in Federal District Court in Washington, setting up what could be a pivotal battle over the reach of the Supreme Court’s ruling last year that granted Guantánamo detainees the right to contest their imprisonments in habeas corpus suits. [*]

Richard H. Pildes, a constitutional law professor at New York University, said the case could be “the ultimate confrontation” in the courts over Guantánamo. [if so, they I would have to conclude the Obama administration screwed the pooch on this attempt to cover Bush’s rather sloppy trail] [*]

Mr. Pildes noted that after long battles over whether detainees could use the centuries-old habeas corpus principle that prisoners can challenge their detention, the Supreme Court decision provided few guidelines for the courts.

In the showdown over Mr. Jawad, Judge Huvelle, who was appointed by President Bill Clinton, seems poised to assert the courts’ authority to release detainees who are not legally held, while the Obama administration has suggested it can continue detention when it claims it must. [that’s periously close to unitary theory sounding pablum] [*]

For some former Bush administration officials, the fight over Mr. Jawad’s fate is a bittersweet moment in which the new administration is wrestling with some of the arguments that were advanced for years by Bush officials about the risks of opening the courts to the detainees. [*] [please?]

The Obama administration must decide before Thursday’s court session whether to make Mr. Jawad’s habeas suit a test case, said Charles D. Stimson, who was a Defense Department official until 2007 and is now a senior legal fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation.

“This is the Obama administration’s time to decide,” Mr. Stimson said, “what they will do when a habeas judge orders a person released, but they can’t in good conscience let him go.”

American officials say Mr. Jawad, who was a teenager when he was captured, threw a hand grenade that seriously wounded two American servicemen and their Afghan translator in an attack in Kabul in 2002.

Though Judge Huvelle said earlier this month that there was “no evidence” against Mr. Jawad, the release of a detainee facing such accusations would intensify the pressures from critics of the president’s plan to close the detention center.

Judges in the Federal District Court in Washington are in the early stages of ruling on some 200 cases of Guantánamo detainees. Several have expressed skepticism about many of the government cases, ruling for the government so far in 5 cases and for detainees in 26.

Of the 26 detainees who have won their cases, though, 17 remain at Guantánamo. But Mr. Jawad’s case differs from most of those cases in a critical respect, his lawyers argue. In most of the 17 cases, the administration says it has been unable to find countries willing to take the men that will provide adequate human rights and security assurances. But Afghanistan has said it wants Mr. Jawad returned immediately. [presto, chango, we have a winner] [*]

One of Mr. Jawad’s lawyers, Jonathan Hafetz of the American Civil Liberties Union, said that the Obama administration’s focus on civilian prosecution as their habeas corpus case grew troubled seemed reminiscent of the Bush administration’s repeated changes of strategy in the courts.

Mr. Hafetz said Mr. Jawad was hopeful but bewildered. “Every time he is on the verge of winning and proving his innocence, the government seeks to change the rules of the game,” Mr. Hafetz said. [*] [that when the awesome power of a capricious government begins to weigh on me heavily]

Judge Huvelle’s terse order on Tuesday did not explain her plans. But in angry remarks from the bench on July 16, she expressed suspicion that the government might try to keep her from ordering Mr. Jawad released. She said she would not delay her case so the government can “pull this rug from under the court at the last minute” by moving Mr. Jawad into the civilian criminal justice system. [a little preemption there of here own] [*]

A military judge found last year that much of the evidence against Mr. Jawad consisted of statements he gave after he was tortured by Afghan officials. In Judge Huvelle’s July 16 hearing, Department of Justice lawyers said the government would no longer rely on those statements to justify Mr. Jawad’s detention. [I know, they had their fingers crossed under the table] [*]

In a filing on Friday, the Obama administration said there were “multiple eyewitness accounts that were not previously available” and other evidence, including a witness who “alleges that he saw Jawad throw a grenade that wounded two American service members.” [well that’s why there are timlines for presenting evidence and so forth; you cannot keep finding new evidence in perpetuity] [that violates rule of law] [*]

Mr. Jawad has also been fighting attempted murder charges in the military commission system at Guantánamo. But there, too, the government has met obstacles, including a military judge’s decision that banned prosecutors from using Mr. Jawad’s statements to interrogators.

The military judge, Col. Stephen R. Henley, found that Afghan officials had threatened to kill Mr. Jawad and his family if he did not confess to the attack. Colonel Henley also said Mr. Jawad had been abused at Guantánamo, finding that he had been isolated, beaten, kicked and subject to sleep deprivation.

Mr. Jawad’s age is unknown, but Afghan officials have said he may have been 12 or younger when he was detained. He attempted suicide in Guantánamo in 2003. [*]
Mr. Jawad’s military lawyer, Maj. David J. R. Frakt, said the issue facing the administration on Thursday was likely to be clear cut. “The question,” Maj. Frakt said, “is going to be: Is the administration going to accept the rulings of the judiciary or not?”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

U.S. Opens Way to Ease Sanctions Against Syria

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29syria.html
July 29, 2009
U.S. Opens Way to Ease Sanctions Against Syria
By SHARON OTTERMAN [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Iran presidential election (June 12)] [Obama’s national-security team] [Iran’s broader significance: indicative of much broader issues than Middle East, than putative clash of civlilizations, …] [surely vetted at high NSC levels] [however, probably mostly bureaucracy] [how the apex of policymaking (president-NSC-policymaking model) gets timely information from the larger bureaucracy and uses same for policymaking] [how the Obama administration’s special envoys integrate with NSC slots??] [many moving pieces] [Syria climing back into USFP??] [use psci355] [**]
The Obama administration said Tuesday that it would take new steps to ease American sanctions against Syria on a case-by-case basis, the latest sign of a diplomatic thaw. [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29syria.html
July 29, 2009
U.S. Opens Way to Ease Sanctions Against Syria
By SHARON OTTERMAN [Obama white house] [111th congress, 1st session] [Iran presidential election (June 12)] [Obama’s national-security team] [Iran’s broader significance: indicative of much broader issues than Middle East, than putative clash of civlilizations, …] [surely vetted at high NSC levels] [however, probably mostly bureaucracy] [how the apex of policymaking (president-NSC-policymaking model) gets timely information from the larger bureaucracy and uses same for policymaking] [how the Obama administration’s special envoys integrate with NSC slots??] [many moving pieces] [Syria climing back into USFP??] [use psci355] [**]
The Obama administration said Tuesday that it would take new steps to ease American sanctions against Syria on a case-by-case basis, the latest sign of a diplomatic thaw. [*]

Administration officials said the message was conveyed to President Bashar al-Assad of Syria on Sunday in Damascus by President Obama’s Middle East envoy, George J. Mitchell. Mr. Mitchell said the American government would try to expedite the process for obtaining individual exemptions to the sanctions, which prohibit the export of all American products to Syria except food and medicine. [sanctions] [*]

The move will particularly affect “requests to export products related to information technology and telecommunication equipment and parts and components related to the safety of civil aviation,” said a State Department spokesman, Andrew J. Laine.

While the shift does not change the letter of the law of the sanctions, which were passed by Congress in 2003 and cannot be modified without Congressional consent, administration officials said it was significant because it indicated a change in how the White House would view requests by companies for waivers to sell their wares to Syria. [*]

It is also another notable instance of the Obama administration opening the door to Syria on what it calls a basis of mutual interest and respect — and as part of a broader strategy of trying to get the country to turn away from its alliances with Iran and Islamic militant groups. [I certainly hope they are trying to flip the regime] [if the US and Arab allies can get Syria moving back toward the Arab camp, I imagine that would be better for modernity] [*] In June, the administration said it would send an ambassador to Syria for [poorly written—should read something like “Syria, which would be the … that an American president …] [*]the first time since 2005. [*]

Under the Syria Accountability Act, as the sanctions are known, the president can work through the Commerce Department to grant exemptions for national security reasons in one of six categories, including one that allows for the sale of airplane parts to ensure safe civil aviation. [*]Under the Bush administration, however, a limited number of such exemptions were granted.

“We are going to look at these waivers, especially on airplane spare parts, and our predisposition is going to be, view them favorably, as opposed to the prior administration’s policy,” said a senior administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter. [probably shot her-his mouth off too much] [*]

The decision to move toward eased sanctions was first reported Tuesday in The Wall Street Journal.

The sanctions have powerful backers in Congress, and the initial reaction against any effort to ease them was swift. [*]

Representative Ileana Ros-Lehtinen of Florida, the ranking Republican on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said she was “deeply troubled that the United States would make unilateral concessions to the Syrian regime and ease pressure on Damascus, even as the State Department recently reported to Congress that Syria continues to pursue advanced missile and chemical, biological and nuclear weapons capabilities and to sponsor violent Islamist extremist groups like Hezbollah and Hamas.” [perhaps the administration is finally doing something that might change some of that rather poor behavior] [*]

Representative Eliot L. Engel, a Democrat from New York, who helped write the sanctions bill, said that while granting such exemptions was “perfectly legal” under the act, he would urge caution. “Syria, from what I can see, has not changed its spots,” he said. [*]

Mr. Mitchell’s weekend visit to Syria for talks with Mr. Assad was his second trip there in two months. Administration officials said that Mr. Mitchell and Mr. Assad also tentatively agreed that a future delegation from the United States Central Command and Iraq would travel to Damascus, Syria’s capital, and discuss greater cooperation in securing the Syria-Iraq border against insurgent traffic, a high priority of the Obama administration.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Arrests in Terror Case Bewilder Associates

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/us/29terror.html
July 29, 2009
Arrests in Terror Case Bewilder Associates
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis, even in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [*]
WILLOW SPRING, N.C. — Daniel Boyd was a man of rare conviction for these parts.
Rare because he and his family were Muslims in this quiet rural subdivision where the denominations generally run from Baptist to Presbyterian. But also rare for his intensity. [that I doubt; my experience (admittedly some years ago now) was that many were intensely … in the deep south] [fill in the blank: Christians, Baptists, gun owners,

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/us/29terror.html
July 29, 2009
Arrests in Terror Case Bewilder Associates
By CAMPBELL ROBERTSON [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis, even in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [*]
WILLOW SPRING, N.C. — Daniel Boyd was a man of rare conviction for these parts.
Rare because he and his family were Muslims in this quiet rural subdivision where the denominations generally run from Baptist to Presbyterian. But also rare for his intensity. [that I doubt; my experience (admittedly some years ago now) was that many were intensely … in the deep south] [fill in the blank: Christians, Baptists, gun owners, patriotic, Jim Crow, …] [*]

“How many Christians you see standing in the yard praying five times a day?” asked Jeremy Kuhn, 20, who lives across the street. “They just believed more than anyone else.”

But to the disbelief of Mr. Kuhn, the federal authorities say Mr. Boyd and two of his sons took their convictions beyond religious faith and into terrorism. They were among seven men charged on Monday with supporting violent jihad movements in countries including Israel, Jordan, Kosovo and Pakistan. An eighth man was still being sought, said a spokeswoman for federal prosecutors in Raleigh, about 20 miles north of here.

The men are charged with stockpiling automatic weapons and traveling abroad numerous times to participate in jihadist movements. There is no indication in the indictment that they were planning attacks in the United States, though prosecutors said they had practiced military tactics this summer in a rural county close to Virginia.

Their plans apparently involved a suicide attack, according to an e-mail message Mr. Boyd sent in 2008 to another defendant, Hysen Sherifi, about dying as a martyr. [why would he go and leave his wife like that?; what did he envision for her?; did he imagine it would be swell for her to live the rest of her life on the US dole?] [it just doesn’t quite smell right] [*]

Besides Mr. Boyd, who is 39, the indictment names his sons Zakariya, 20, and Dylan, 22; Anes Subasic, 33; Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan, 22; Ziyad Yaghi, 21; and Mr. Sherifi, 24. All are American citizens except Mr. Sherifi, who is from Kosovo and has legal residence in the United States. Detention hearings for the men are set for Thursday.

Mr. Boyd, the son of a Marine, is a convert to Islam, and received training from Islamic radicals in Pakistan and Afghanistan, the indictment said.

Prosecutors said much of the activity took place over the last three years, citing coded conversations, exchanges of cash, numerous gun purchases and a Kalashnikov demonstration in Mr. Boyd’s living room. [yes, I read the indictment though it did not specify on the coded] [it certainly narrowed the timeline to 2006 to present and that may have been explicit effort to steer jury-judge away from inconvenient truths about his early years fighting with mujahedeen against Soviets or Soviet-installed Afghanis] [*]

Mr. Boyd, the central figure in the indictment, is also charged with lying to federal agents in 2007 about his reasons for a trip to Israel. According to the indictment, he and several other defendants had intended to join violent jihadists in the Palestinian territories, though the trip was ultimately unsuccessful.

It was the second trip to Israel mentioned in the indictment. Mr. Boyd is said to have taken his son Dylan to Gaza meet jihadists in March 2006, though that, too, was apparently unsuccessful. [but I remember they broke up (it may have been different group; I’d have to check the indictment again) and one or more left one day and another 2-3 days later—apparently trying not to attract attention] [but it also suggested they were no there longer enough to do anything] [also, as somebody who’s flown to Tel Aviv on El Al, you get the feeling the state knows where you are] [*]

Highlighted in the indictment, but not part of the charges, was a period the authorities say Mr. Boyd spent with his brother in Afghanistan and Pakistan from 1989 to 1992, training with and supporting fighters who were trying to overthrow the Soviet-backed government in Kabul. [*]They were in the news at the time, when the Pakistani government charged them with bank robbery and sentenced them to lose their right hands and left feet. (The convictions were overturned by the Pakistani Supreme Court at the urging of the State Department.) [**]

Federal officials in Washington said that the men charged on Monday were not seen as serious terrorist threats to the United States or American interests abroad, and that there were no indications of ties to Al Qaeda or other militant groups. But the officials said there was concern that they were amassing a sizable number of automatic weapons, given Mr. Boyd’s record as a foreign fighter.

“What essentially this is about is a guy with foreign fighter experience,” said one law enforcement official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the pending prosecution, “who comes back to the U.S. from the conflict zone with street cred and a network of contacts overseas, intending to recruit others who were on the fence.” [that sounds much more intense than I imagined when reading the indictment] [*]

Mr. Boyd’s wife, Sabrina, cited that same period in defense of her husband. “He was there fighting against the Soviets in a war that had the full backing of the U.S. government,” Ms. Boyd said through a spokeswoman, Khalilah Sabra of the American Muslim Society Freedom Foundation, an advocacy group. [*]

Ms. Boyd is also an American, and, according to a 1991 Washington Post report, the couple were high school sweethearts in Northern Virginia. A neighbor said the Boyds looked for other churches before settling on Islam. The Post profile said Mr. Boyd’s stepfather was a Muslim. [*]

“The charges have not been substantiated,” Ms. Boyd said. “We are an ordinary family, and we have the right to justice, and we believe justice will prevail. We are decent people who care about other human beings.”

Neighbors were startled, even angered by the arrests, which they learned about when federal agents, some carrying assault weapons, swarmed over the lawn of the Boyds’ house. [yes, by all means, whatever else you do don’t screw up somebodies well manicured lawn] [*&]

The house, with a Ford Bronco in the driveway and a swimming pool in the back, looks like any other in the quiet subdivision, and neighbors said the Boyds were generally no different than anyone else, other than being nicer than average. Mr. Boyd ran a company installing drywall, for which his two older sons often worked. The Boyds had two younger sons, one of whom was killed in a car accident two years ago, and a daughter.

Prosecutors said Mr. Boyd had stopped attending mosques this year because of “ideological differences” and had begun having Friday prayer services at home.

The Boyds had the usual interactions with the neighbors — tool swapping, rides to school — and other than a day when the house was egged, which neighbors attributed to their religion, their faith did not seem to be an issue.

“We never really had a problem with it,” said Anthony Perfetto, 15, who used to have after-school snacks at the Boyd home. “All they’d say about it was like they had to go pray, and that’s about it.”

All of which has left neighbors shaking their heads and repeating that there must have been some kind of mistake. [*]

“I don’t believe any of this,” Mr. Kuhn said. “And it’s going to take a whole lot of evidence to convince me otherwise.” [*] [smell test?]
Liz Robbins contributed reporting from New York, and Eric Schmitt from Washington.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Death of a Doctrine

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802110.html
Death of a Doctrine
Obama Discovers Engagement's Limits
By Michael Gerson
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [why Gerson seems to think Obama elevated talking to enemies to doctrinal level is beyond me] [he simply suggested it was a good idea and that little could be accomplished if the US government was determined not even to discuss matters with regimes the US doesn’t much like] [then Clinton and others jumped him; and in the general the GOP picked it up] [now it’s doctrinal: Obama apparently thinks he’s able to talk the US out of any scrape no matter what the substantive issues??] [bizaare] [use psci355] [*]
The Obama administration lacks a foreign policy ideology as a matter of ideology.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802110.html
Death of a Doctrine
Obama Discovers Engagement's Limits
By Michael Gerson
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [why Gerson seems to think Obama elevated talking to enemies to doctrinal level is beyond me] [he simply suggested it was a good idea and that little could be accomplished if the US government was determined not even to discuss matters with regimes the US doesn’t much like] [then Clinton and others jumped him; and in the general the GOP picked it up] [now it’s doctrinal: Obama apparently thinks he’s able to talk the US out of any scrape no matter what the substantive issues??] [bizaare] [use psci355] [*]
The Obama administration lacks a foreign policy ideology as a matter of ideology. Speaking recently at the Council on Foreign Relations, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton asserted, "Rigid ideologies and old formulas don't apply." The torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans -- tempered by pragmatism, proud of its ad hockery and willing to consider everything on a case-by-case basis.

But even lacking an ideology, the administration does have a doctrine. The defining principle of President Obama's foreign policy is engagement with America's adversaries. Much of the president's public diplomacy has been designed to clear a path for such talks [*]-- expressing respect for legitimate grievances, apologizing for past wrongs [why this so upsets conservatives is difficult to understand] [have these people never been married or in a serious relationship] [the healing power of je suis desolee is incredible] [*] and offering dialogue without preconditions.

Six months on, how fares the Obama doctrine? Concerning North Korea and Iran, the doctrine is on its deathbed.

North Korea responded to administration outreach by testing a nuclear weapon, firing missiles toward U.S. allies, resuming plutonium reprocessing and threatening the United States with a "fire shower of nuclear retaliation." During congressional testimony, Clinton admitted, "At this point [it] seems implausible, if not impossible, the North Koreans will return to the six-party talks and begin to disable their nuclear capacity again."

The Iranian regime's reaction to engagement was to cut the ribbon on a nuclear enrichment facility, add centrifuges, conduct a fraudulent election, and kill and imprison a variety of political opponents. Regarding administration overtures, Clinton recently told the BBC, "We haven't had any response. We've certainly reached out and made it clear that's what we'd be willing to do . . . but I don't think they have any capacity to make that kind of decision right now."

The problem is not engagement itself -- which was, after all, attempted in various forms by the previous administration. The difficulty is that the Obama foreign policy team has often argued that the reason for tension and conflict with nations such as North Korea and Iran is a lack of adequate American engagement -- which is absurd, and which has raised absurdly high expectations. [I disagree] [they simply pointed out the obvious from which many critics have run in disparte directions—viz, without discussion, little hope of plumming the depths of America’s sour relations with certain others is problematic at best] [and that’s absolutely true] [it doesn’t follow that talking will perforce remdy the most recalcitrant of foes] [*]

During the 2008 campaign, for example, Obama adviser P.J. Crowley (now State Department spokesman) argued, "Hard-liners on both sides have dominated that relationship and made it very difficult for the United States and Iran to come together and have a serious conversation." But can the lack of a serious conversation with Iran -- or with North Korea -- now credibly be blamed on the previous administration? Obama's diplomatic hand has been extended for a while now. Fists remain clenched. This is not because some magical diplomatic words remain unspoken. It is because of the nature of oppressive regimes themselves. [no, but he didn’t say that talking would loosen clenched fists] [indeed, if Gerson would go back to the clinched fist metaphor he would read that Obama was being quite pragrmatic and noting that America’s enemies perpetually yell at the US with fists clinched and in order for progress, not only would America have to be prepared to listen to probable enemies but probable enemies would have to be prepared to unclench their fists!] [Gerson, as speech writed you of all persons know the power of words] [go back to read what Obama said and stop interspersing Obama with Crowley to make some point] [*]

Such regimes are often internally preoccupied. Precisely because they lack genuine legitimacy, they spend large amounts of time and effort maintaining their fragile authority, consolidating power and managing undemocratic transitions. North Korea confronts a succession crisis. Iran deals with growing dissent and clerical division. Both tend to make calculations based on internal power struggles, not some rational calculation of their external image and interests. They are so inwardly focused that they do not have, as Clinton said, "any capacity" to respond to engagement. It is questionable in these cases whether we currently have any serious negotiating partners at all. [absolutely; and I’ll even grant you that talking to Iran presently may be exactly the wrong thing to do (it may legitimize the regime that lacks legitimacy) and demonstrates the exceptions to Obama implied rule] [but I won’t accept that he raised it to doctrinal levels—that’s simply his critics that are looking for something about which to carp] [*]

And the inherent instability of oppressive regimes also leads them to tighten control by invoking threats from abroad -- particularly from the United States. Because anti-Americanism is a central commitment of North Korean and Iranian ideologies, any softening of this resentment requires a kind of voluntary regime change. Pyongyang and Tehran would need to find a new source of legitimacy -- a new prop for their power -- other than hatred for America. Not easy or likely.

The Obama administration's public campaign of engaging enemies is headed toward an entirely unintended consequence. Eventually it will raise expectations for action. As the extended hand is slapped again and again, the goals of North Korea and Iran will be fully revealed and the cost to American credibility will rise. Already the administration has given Iran a September deadline to respond to the offer of talks and has threatened "crippling action" if Iran achieves nuclear capabilities. Congress is preparing sanctions on Iranian refined petroleum, which would escalate tensions significantly.

This is the paradox of the Obama doctrine. By attempting to engage North Korea and Iran so visibly, Obama is dramatically exposing the limits of engagement -- and building the case for confrontation. [except that he never made it doctrine] [he simply said as a practical matter—and he was correct though it clearly is not universal] [*]
mgerson@globalengage.org
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

A New Airport Ritual, Swine Flu Screening

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/a-new-airport-ritual-swine-flu-screening/
The Lede - New York Times Blog
July 29, 2009, 9:40 am
A New Airport Ritual, Swine Flu Screening
By Robert Mackey [China] [Asia, all over Asia] [NEAsia] [global] [the swine flu pandemic] [use psci350] [use ir text] [global commons: infectious diseases] [this fall could be a major problem with swine flu] [*]
On Tuesday, in response to an article by my colleague Sheryl Gay Stolberg about her daughter’s experience of being “caught in China’s swine flu dragnet,” a reader of NYTimes.com posted a comment with a link to the video embedded below, which he said shows passengers on a flight from the United States being screened for infection on arrival at an airport in Shanghai last month. According to the person who seems to have shot this short clip, it shows “people in white hazmat suits” who came aboard the

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/a-new-airport-ritual-swine-flu-screening/
The Lede - New York Times Blog
July 29, 2009, 9:40 am
A New Airport Ritual, Swine Flu Screening
By Robert Mackey [China] [Asia, all over Asia] [NEAsia] [global] [the swine flu pandemic] [use psci350] [use ir text] [global commons: infectious diseases] [this fall could be a major problem with swine flu] [*]
On Tuesday, in response to an article by my colleague Sheryl Gay Stolberg about her daughter’s experience of being “caught in China’s swine flu dragnet,” a reader of NYTimes.com posted a comment with a link to the video embedded below, which he said shows passengers on a flight from the United States being screened for infection on arrival at an airport in Shanghai last month. According to the person who seems to have shot this short clip, it shows “people in white hazmat suits” who came aboard the plane to “take the temperature of every passenger by way of a laser beam aimed at their foreheads.” [that’s got to scare the bejesus out of people] [you’re already in a foreign land where you don’t speak the language; the crowds are like you’ve probably never (or rarely) experienced; and hazmat suited authorities come in zapping your forehead with laser thermometers] [good heavens] [*]

In Ms. Stolberg’s article, her daughter says that she went through a similar screening this month on arrival in Beijing: “Before we got off the plane, we saw people in white suits with things that looked like radar guns. They pointed a light at our foreheads, moving quickly. Luckily, no one had a temperature, so we were free to go.”

As governments around the world try to take precautions to prevent the spread of H1N1 virus, ahead of an expected spike in new cases later this year, they also seem to making different decisions about how hard to try to prevent the simultaneous spread of hysteria about the disease. [*] [because in China, the thing could go off like a dirty bomb!] [*] The amateur video above suggests that the authorities in Shanghai are not worried about alarming tourists if it might help them to identify possible carriers of the infection.

Officials in other countries seem to be striking the balance in different ways. This seems to be particularly evident as over the past few months, passengers have shot a number of amateur videos of the various kinds of screening taking place in different countries.

Here is another video, said to be of a screening on board a flight at Narita airport in Tokyo, uploaded to YouTube in May: [*]

Just a few months after the first cases of the new strain of H1N1 were reported, the airport swine flu screening video seems to have already become a sort of sub-genre on YouTube. The Lede found these two related videos, apparently showing more low-key screenings taking place at one airport in Mexico in May and another in Turkey in June.
If readers know of or come across more amateur video of flu screenings in other countries, please let us know, and we will add them to our list.

New Effort to Fight TB in South Africa

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29safrica.html
July 29, 2009
Khayelitsha Journal
New Effort to Fight TB in South Africa
By CELIA W. DUGGER [South Africa] [Africa] [southern cone] [bottom of the world] [history of apartheid and all the rest] [hundreds of years of Germany-Dutch and some British colonialism] [followup] [a veritable breeding ground for serious communicable diseases such as TB-consumption] [use psci350] [followup] [*]
KHAYELITSHA, South Africa — Busisiwe Beko, a gregarious community health worker for Doctors Without Borders, set out on foot into this vast township of 500,000 people to hunt for one particular ailing young woman. Ms. Beko strode along thin dirt paths among densely packed shacks, frequently pausing to ask for directions through the intricate maze.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29safrica.html
July 29, 2009
Khayelitsha Journal
New Effort to Fight TB in South Africa
By CELIA W. DUGGER [South Africa] [Africa] [southern cone] [bottom of the world] [history of apartheid and all the rest] [hundreds of years of Germany-Dutch and some British colonialism] [followup] [a veritable breeding ground for serious communicable diseases such as TB-consumption] [use psci350] [followup] [*]
KHAYELITSHA, South Africa — Busisiwe Beko, a gregarious community health worker for Doctors Without Borders, set out on foot into this vast township of 500,000 people to hunt for one particular ailing young woman. Ms. Beko strode along thin dirt paths among densely packed shacks, frequently pausing to ask for directions through the intricate maze.

She finally found the woman, Nolusindiso Vani, 23, in a one-room shanty of plywood and tin. Shy and soft-spoken, Ms. Vani huddled in a battered arm chair, wearing a tan coat against the wintry morning chill and a pretty pair of black patent leather shoes. [*]In the dim light cast by a bare bulb, Ms. Vani explained that she had lost her baby in a miscarriage last month around the time she learned she was infected with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis, a potentially lethal strain whose spread poses a grave threat to millions of H.I.V.-positive South Africans with weakened immune systems. [oh my goodness this could be quite serious] [*]

“Sometimes I feel like I may vomit,” Ms. Vani said, confessing that the new drugs she had begun taking made her nauseated.

Under South Africa’s current policy, Ms. Vani would normally have been whisked away to a hospital after tuberculosis was diagnosed and isolated from the public for a grueling regimen of toxic, hard-to-tolerate pills and injections, lasting months. [*]

In the neighboring Eastern Cape Province, patients have effectively been imprisoned in a hospital encircled by fences topped with razor wire, and dozens of them have escaped in desperate bids to reunite with their families. [*]Both the Eastern Cape and Western Cape Provinces have sought court orders to compel the return of runaways.

But in this case, Ms. Vani is being treated in a local clinic and lives at home under a pilot program run by Doctors Without Borders and supported by both the city of Cape Town and Western Cape Province. The idea is to show that such patients can be successfully treated in an impoverished community like Khayelitsha even while they are still infectious.

For Ms. Vani to continue in the program, Ms. Beko had to ensure that the young woman could live at home during her treatment with minimal risk of infecting others. Tuberculosis spreads through the air when patients cough and sneeze, and the germs could get trapped in the tiny room where Ms. Vani lives alone. [*] [higly contagious] [*]

“They may send you to the hospital, as there are no windows in the house,” Ms. Beko said with a doubtful shake of her head.

Ms. Vani, eager to avoid a long-term hospitalization, promised that she would remain alone in the house and only see friends outside in the open air. “I already told my boyfriend it would not be good for him to sleep over,” she said through a paper mask that covered her mouth. [*]

Drug-resistant tuberculosis is a mounting global health threat. The World Health Organization reported the highest rates of it ever last year. Some 500,000 of the 9 million new cases of tuberculosis in 2007, the most recent estimates, failed to respond to the standard, inexpensive first-line drugs. About 150,000 people died of drug-resistant TB. [*]

It is a particularly virulent problem in Africa, where AIDS has heightened the vulnerability of millions. [*]Stopping the spread of these expensive-to-treat, hard-to-cure strains of TB is a daunting task. Ten African countries do not even have laboratories that can detect them, said Dr. Paul Nunn, coordinator of the drug-resistance unit in the W.H.O.’s tuberculosis department.

South Africa, the richest country in the region, has poured money into building more space in hospitals for drug-resistant TB patients, but researchers say the number of new patients will grow faster than the country can add hospital beds. [*]

Even hospitalization is no panacea. The strains can spread within them, and the fear of being sent away to distant clinics — especially for poor single mothers raising children alone — may drive those with the disease underground.

“The moment you put somebody away for months, if not years, lock them up and put a fence around them, how are you going to get people to come forward?” asked Dr. Virginia Azevedo, who manages health services for the city of Cape Town here in Khayelitsha. [absolutely] [*]

It is hard to imagine a more ideal place than this for the spread of tuberculosis, a disease that hovers in the air. People here live at close quarters in overcrowded shacks that sprawl, like colorful jumbles of debris, as far as the eye can see. They go to work crammed into minibuses. They gather in the evening in the homes of friends who have televisions, or in small saloons.

Almost 6,000 people were found to have TB in just this one community last year. About 200 of those with drug-resistant TB joined the pilot project. Each day for at least two years, participants are required to go to a clinic where a nurse watches them swallow more than a dozen pills. For the first six months, they must get daily, painful injections. Many of them suffer nausea, and some become permanently deaf because of the drugs. Three-quarters of those enrolled are also H.I.V.-positive and many of them must take antiretroviral medicines. [is it the mixture of different drugs with contra indications?] [*]

Cheryl McDermid, 59, a Canadian doctor with Doctors Without Borders, manages the project here. She said the early results were hopeful, if sobering.

About a fifth of the patients enrolled last year died, either while waiting weeks for a diagnosis or after treatment began. One in six of those who started treatment dropped out. [more than a third, one way or the other] [36.7%] [*]But most patients have stuck with it and are now no longer infectious. It is still too early to know how many will ultimately be cured, but there is no evidence that they are infecting the people who live with them, Dr. McDermid said.

Health workers in the program know they will have to work hard to coax those who quit back into the fold. One counselor, Thami Ndlovu, recently went searching for Xandile Charlie, 22, a pregnant woman who had missed a week of clinic visits.

Ms. Charlie told Mr. Ndlovu that the drugs were compounding her nausea. She also complained that she had been told she was not sick enough to qualify for a welfare grant, though she is unable to work. That meant she was short of food — and taking the medicines on an empty stomach is hard.

Mr. Ndlovu listened sympathetically, promising to get someone to help with the grant. But he also warned that if she quit treatment, her tuberculosis could turn into an even deadlier, more resistant form of TB.
“You might die,” he told her. “Please, today, go to the clinic.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Cambodia's Crackdown Stirs Concerns About Legal System

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803016.html
Cambodia's Crackdown Stirs Concerns About Legal System
By Tim Johnston
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [Cambodia] [SEAsia] [killing fields of the Khmer Rouge in late 1970s] [began in earnest almost immediately after US withdrew from Indochina in spring 1979] [use psci358] [followup] [strange goings on with journalists, HR activists, and HIV-AIDS victims?] [why is this happening?] [*]
BANGKOK -- A heightened crackdown on journalists and opposition activists in recent weeks by Cambodia's leaders has provoked new concern that the government is engaging in widespread abuse of the nation's legal system to muzzle its detractors.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803016.html
Cambodia's Crackdown Stirs Concerns About Legal System
By Tim Johnston
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [Cambodia] [SEAsia] [killing fields of the Khmer Rouge in late 1970s] [began in earnest almost immediately after US withdrew from Indochina in spring 1979] [use psci358] [followup] [strange goings on with journalists, HR activists, and HIV-AIDS victims?] [why is this happening?] [*]
BANGKOK -- A heightened crackdown on journalists and opposition activists in recent weeks by Cambodia's leaders has provoked new concern that the government is engaging in widespread abuse of the nation's legal system to muzzle its detractors.

Newspaper editor Hang Chakra is serving a one-year sentence in Phnom Penh's notorious Prey Sar prison for articles that alleged corruption among government officials. Opposition activist Moeung Sonn, who heads the Khmer Civilization Foundation, fled the country last month after being given a two-year sentence because government officials feared unrest when he questioned whether a new lighting system would damage the revered Angkor Wat temple. [he raised the question and gets sentenced to 2 years??] [*] Last week, a court heard charges against Ho Vann, a member of parliament from the opposition Sam Rainsy Party who is accused of slandering 22 generals by questioning their academic qualifications.

And on Friday, a court is to hand down its verdict in a case against Mu Sochua, another opposition member of parliament, who is accused of defaming Cambodia's authoritarian prime minister, Hun Sen.

"I'm sure I will be found guilty, unless there is some magic in the air, and I don't feel that it is," Mu Sochua said in a telephone interview.

The cases have caused growing concern among human rights activists about Cambodia's legal system, which has long been accused of political bias. [it’s incredibly screwed up and has been since well before the killing fields] [King Noordim Sihanouk’s colonial patronage system was sensitive as hell and not much has changed for the better] [*]

"The Cambodian government is imposing its most serious crackdown on freedom of expression in recent years," Brad Adams, the Asia director for Human Rights Watch, said in a statement last week.

The case against Mu Sochua, a mother of three and former minister for women and veterans affairs, has brought the concern to a head because she is the first person to challenge Hun Sen so openly.

In a lawsuit, she accused Hun Sen of calling her "strong leg" -- a term considered derogatory in Khmer culture -- in a speech in early April. When he declined to apologize, she called a news conference and declared that his comment was an insult to all Cambodian women. [god know that’s unforgivable] [*]That provoked a countersuit from Hun Sen. The courts have thrown out her lawsuit, but Hun Sen's is ongoing.

"If he allowed Mu Sochua to challenge him, other people might go down the same path. It is to make sure a second person won't try the same thing in the future," said Son Chhay, another outspoken opposition member of parliament.

Mu Sochua is fighting her legal battle alone. Her attorney withdrew last month after he came under government pressure, provoking a protest from the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights.

"The government kept on slamming him with more and more penalties, and he was facing the end of his career," Mu Sochua said. "I am not going to put another lawyer through that torture."

If convicted, she is likely to face a fine of about $2,500. But, more important, she could lose the right to sit in parliament, and that could be Hun Sen's intent, analysts said.

His ruling Cambodian People's Party won 90 of 123 seats in parliament in elections last year, but analysts said Hun Sen could be using the courts to get rid of the opposition. [*]

"He wants to put them out of business," said David Chandler, a history professor at Monash University in Australia. "The whole concept of pluralism hasn't got any roots in Cambodia. The opposition is almost, by definition, disloyal." [*]

Son Chhay said the recent crackdown is a symptom of a government that is failing to address some of the pressing issues facing the country, including corruption, land seizures and economic stagnation.

"Although they control the institutions, they can't allow activists or the opposition to spread the issues -- that could bring disaster. Like many dictatorial regimes in the region, because they are unable to solve the problems, they resort to all measures to control the people and shut them up," Son Chhay said.

The government also is looking to pass a law that would limit demonstrations to 200 people and require permission from authorities.

In the early 1990s, the international community invested about $1.5 billion in a U.N. effort to restore civil government to a country that Hun Sen, a former member of the Khmer Rouge, had run since 1985. [*]

The opposition fears that he is destroying fragile institutions that have taken years to build. [*]

"What is really detrimental to Cambodia as a whole is that because he wants to make a point as a man, he is destroying so much we have invested in nation-building," Mu Sochua said. "It is not me on trial, but the judiciary of Cambodia."
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Nigerian Troops Surround Militant’s House

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29nigeria.html
July 29, 2009
Nigerian Troops Surround Militant’s House
By ADAM NOSSITER [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Nigerian security forces have surrounded the house of a leader of an Islamic sect in a town in northeastern Nigeria, in an effort to halt an uprising by the sect that has led to hundreds of deaths in the region, [different than the normal insurgency stuff where too few resources shared is at the base of the problems] [*] local news reports said Tuesday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29nigeria.html
July 29, 2009
Nigerian Troops Surround Militant’s House
By ADAM NOSSITER [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Nigerian security forces have surrounded the house of a leader of an Islamic sect in a town in northeastern Nigeria, in an effort to halt an uprising by the sect that has led to hundreds of deaths in the region, [different than the normal insurgency stuff where too few resources shared is at the base of the problems] [*] local news reports said Tuesday.

A local reporter, Idris Abdullahi of the News Agency of Nigeria, said the town, Maiduguri, was essentially shut down Tuesday after clashes between the police and Islamists over the past two days. In a telephone interview, he said that the streets were deserted and that he had seen “100 bodies” of militants at the police headquarters; other reports spoke of as many as 260 dead there. [I saw 300 on the screen crawl yesterday late afternoon] [*]

“The economy is paralyzed,” Mr. Abdullahi said. “Everything is closed down. There is no movement — only the military and police.” He said several churches had been burned by “hoodlums.”

Other Nigerian news reports said that numerous houses had been burned, and that there were bodies in the streets. Phone communication with the town appeared to have been severely disrupted Tuesday. [*]

Nigeria’s president, Umaru Yar’Adua, said Tuesday that the situation was “under control” and that the military would “contain” the militants “once and for all.”

The violence, which the authorities said began with an attack on a police station in the town of Bauchi on Sunday that left at least 39 people dead, quickly spread across four states in a heavily Muslim region long troubled by religious unrest. In this instance it appeared to have been led by an obscure fundamentalist group opposed to what the authorities call “Western education.”

Paul Lubeck, a political sociologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who specializes in Nigeria and Islam, said the violence had its roots in Nigeria’s severe economic difficulties. [*] [so an intersection with the typical insurgency stuff we’ve heard about for past few years?] [*]

Despite Nigeria’s immense oil wealth, about 54 percent of its population lives on less than $1 a day, according to the World Bank. Widespread poverty and unemployment make parts of Nigeria a fertile breeding ground for the antiestablishment message of the sect’s leaders, Mr. Lubeck said.

“This particular movement is a movement of the dispossessed, the lumpen,” he said. “It’s not the major Islamic movement in the country. This is an attack on establishment Islam.” [?] [*]

A more mainstream Islamic group in Nigeria, the Jamaat Nasr al-Islam, or J.N.I., on Tuesday condemned the militants, known as Boko Haram, a Hausa expression meaning “Western education is prohibited.”

J.N.I. said through its acting secretary general, Abdulkarim Muazu, that the attacks on the police were “criminal.” Mr. Muazu added that “nobody is against Western education.”
“The first injunction is to read so that you improve on your life,” he added.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Rescuers Search Atlantic After Haitian Boat Sinks

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/americas/29HAITI.html
July 29, 2009
Rescuers Search Atlantic After Haitian Boat Sinks
By DAMIEN CAVE [Haiti] [Latin America and Caribbean] [another wave of Haitian economic refugees?] [I don’t recall any recent waves] [the last time I can remember anything particularly worrisome in these terms was in the 1990s] [the bubble of prosperity appearntly even trickled down to Haiti] [they notoriously overload boats with bodies and the vessels capsize in perilous waters] [unlike the old days with Cuba, nobody is out there attempting to save the Haitians and human tragedies unfold] [not exactly global commons but similar issues with global poverty and environmental degredation that consumes jobs, etc] [*]
MIAMI — The Coast Guard said Tuesday that for a second day it was scouring a wide area of the Atlantic for dozens of Haitians who had crammed onto a rickety sailboat that

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/americas/29HAITI.html
July 29, 2009
Rescuers Search Atlantic After Haitian Boat Sinks
By DAMIEN CAVE [Haiti] [Latin America and Caribbean] [another wave of Haitian economic refugees?] [I don’t recall any recent waves] [the last time I can remember anything particularly worrisome in these terms was in the 1990s] [the bubble of prosperity appearntly even trickled down to Haiti] [they notoriously overload boats with bodies and the vessels capsize in perilous waters] [unlike the old days with Cuba, nobody is out there attempting to save the Haitians and human tragedies unfold] [not exactly global commons but similar issues with global poverty and environmental degredation that consumes jobs, etc] [*]
MIAMI — The Coast Guard said Tuesday that for a second day it was scouring a wide area of the Atlantic for dozens of Haitians who had crammed onto a rickety sailboat that sank near the Turks and Caicos Islands with 200 people aboard. As of 5:30 p.m., Coast Guard officials here said 15 bodies had been found, 118 people had been rescued and at least 67 were missing. [*]

The Coast Guard said the boat had hit a coral reef and sunk two and a half miles from the coast of West Caicos, the westernmost island in the Turks and Caicos archipelago. It was unclear whether the boat sank Sunday or Monday. [what was it doing so far east?] [*] The boat, believed to be a shoddily built sail freighter 30 to 50 feet long, had been heading north from Haiti.

Survivors said the boat had departed carrying 160 people and had picked up 40 more before sinking, according to Coast Guard officials. All were believed to be migrants. Most of the missing passengers have probably drowned.

“We’re getting reports of 20-knot winds and six-foot seas out there,” said Petty Officer Jennifer Johnson, a Coast Guard spokeswoman in Miami. “If you put 200 people on a vessel that’s 30 or 40 feet, it’s bound for disaster.” [*]

The sinking is potentially one of the worst disasters in years to strike Haitians fleeing the destitution of their country, the poorest in the Western Hemisphere. If no other survivors are found, the death toll will be the largest since at least 2007, when about 80 Haitians drowned or were eaten by sharks after their boat capsized near Turks and Caicos with 150 people aboard.

Such tragedies have become fixtures of the teal-blue Caribbean. Many Haitians, among others, pay thousands of dollars to smugglers for passage in flimsy boats in hopes of landing in the Bahamas, or reaching the United States, about 700 miles away, to find work.

But traveling without navigation equipment, in overloaded boats, is often perilous. In May, at least nine Haitians died when their boat sank about 15 miles off the Florida coast.

Traffic on the seas off Florida’s coast seems to be increasing. The Coast Guard says it has stopped more than 1,500 migrants from Haiti since October, an increase of about 20 percent over the same period in the previous year. [global economic meltdown] [*]

The boat that sank had been at sea for at least three days when passengers saw a police vessel and accidentally ran the boat onto a reef as they tried to hide, a survivor, Alces Julien, said at a hospital treating some survivors, [*]The Associated Press reported.

The Coast Guard was alerted to the accident at 3 p.m. Monday, and by Tuesday, it was assisting the rescue ships from the Turks and Caicos with helicopters, a C-130 transport plane and a cutter, the Valiant.

The rescue craft picked up 118 survivors, most of them stranded on the shallow coral reef, the Coast Guard said. Petty Officer Johnson said two bodies had been recovered near the reef; most of the other 13 were found slightly farther north.

The search effort, covering 1,600 square miles, ran the course of the day. “We searched through the night and have been at it full force since first light,” Petty Officer Johnson said.

She added that migrant shipwrecks often occurred in the reef-filled waters around Turks and Caicos. “It’s shallow and can get extremely rough,” she said. “All they have is a sail and a rudder, and when they head north, avoiding these hazards becomes extremely difficult.” [there’s also an incredible dropoff just offshore from Grand Turk?] [it’s actually stunningly beautiful from what I remember] [*]

The survivors were shuttled from the reef by boat and helicopter to Providenciales, another island in the western part of the archipelago. It will be up to the Turks and Caicos authorities to decide whether to send the survivors back to the destitute nation they risked their lives to flee.
Mark McDonald contributed reporting from Hong Kong, and Sharon Otterman from New York.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

China Puts Online Games That Glorify Mafia on Its Hit List

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29china.html
July 29, 2009
China Puts Online Games That Glorify Mafia on Its Hit List
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [PRC] [the sometimes awkwardly puritanical CCP going after organized crime] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [vast and informal networks of relations the Party has trouble comprehending] [the Chinese way?] [*]
BEIJING — Whether it is religion, environmentalism or nonprofit charities, the Chinese government has always been wary of any organized activity it cannot directly control.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29china.html
July 29, 2009
China Puts Online Games That Glorify Mafia on Its Hit List
By ANDREW JACOBS [China] [PRC] [the sometimes awkwardly puritanical CCP going after organized crime] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [vast and informal networks of relations the Party has trouble comprehending] [the Chinese way?] [*]
BEIJING — Whether it is religion, environmentalism or nonprofit charities, the Chinese government has always been wary of any organized activity it cannot directly control.

Now there is an addition to the list: simulated organized crime.

On Monday, the Ministry of Culture issued a notice banning online games that feature Mafioso kingpins, marauding street gangs or any sort of hooliganism predisposed to organization. [*]

The decree, which promises “severe punishment” for violators but fails to specify the penalties, also prohibits Web sites from including links to Internet games that glorify organized crime. [it’s actually pretty funny] [the Party trying to stay ahead of the next big thing] [*]

Such games, the ministry said, “embody antisocial behavior like killing, beating, looting and raping,” and their availability “gravely threatens and distorts the social order and moral standards, easily putting young people under harmful influence.” [to say the least] [*]

By Tuesday, a number of popular games, including “Godfather,” “Gangster” and “Mafioso Hitman,” had been excised from the ether, although scores of other violence-laden games were still available.

The ruling is not entirely surprising, given the government’s war against Internet pornography and other sites that can be construed as “socially disruptive.” [but a boat load of porno comes out of Asia for some reason] [*]

This year more than a thousand Web sites have been shut down for “vulgar” content, although some critics complain that academic or public service sites that deal with sexually transmitted diseases have also been swept up in the juggernaut.

Other efforts to control the Internet have been less successful. In June, China issued an edict that would have required all new computers sold domestically to include filtering software, known as Green Dam Youth Escort. The government insisted that the program would only affect pornography, but critics suggested that it could also be used to block political Web sites. The government bowed to pressure from computer manufacturers and users and postponed the new rules this month.

It is unclear whether the ban on Mafia-themed computer games will similarly stoke the fury of China’s 200 million online gamers, although some of those who work in the industry did not seem to be too concerned.

Chen Yongjin, the founder of an online game company in Beijing, said designers could still provide customers with the blood and violence they craved without the offending themes. “The problem is when the killing correlates to real life,” said Mr. Chen, who asked that the name of his company not be printed. [*]

Online games are hugely profitable in China. In 2008, the industry brought in revenues of 18 billion renminbi, or about $2.64 billion, a 77 percent increase over the year before, according to an association of Chinese gaming companies.

Industry experts say that at least 90 percent of all online games in China have some form of violence, whether they involve homicidal kung-fu masters, sword-wielding hobbits or monsters with a taste for human flesh.

“If the games stick to the fantastical or the mythological, there should be no problem,” Mr. Chen said.

The new regulations reflect increased concern over the pernicious effects of computer games on Chinese youth. There are summer camps for teenagers who spend too much online, and in Shanghai, volunteers monitor Internet cafes, looking for children younger than 18.

According to a survey by the National People’s Congress, more than 10 percent of the country’s young people are “addicted” to the Internet, though some psychologists in the West have questioned the validity of such a diagnosis. In China, the definition includes children who spend more than six hours a day staring at a computer screen while avoiding sleep, social interaction and schoolwork. [in China, sadly, where the Party rules persons growing up who don’t forgo sex, drugs, general rambunctiousness in order to fit in with the Young Pioneers Communist League (or whatever it’s called these days) are seen as bizaare] [*]
The China Youth Association for Internet Development issued a report last year in which it claimed that 70 percent of all juvenile crimes were “induced by Internet addiction.” [it’s fascination how many similarties the CCP and conservative American politicians have] [*]
Zhang Jing contributed research.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Ireland to Accept Two Guantánamo Detainees

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30gitmo.html
July 30, 2009
Ireland to Accept Two Guantánamo Detainees
By ALAN COWELL [Ireland] [UK] [the rather unpopular Bush administration either couldn’t impose on others to accept US held detainees (of 3rd countries) or didn’t push it very intently] [whichever the case, the Obama admoinistration has had some success (albeit marginal) what with Bremuda and now Ireland] [Ireland’s taking 2 is some heavy lifting?] [how will they every manage to blend in with two of them?] [followup] [potentially a reason why it’s better to be liked than feared?] [the Machiavelli dualism] [use psci355, 350] [*]
PARIS — As the Obama administration struggles to fulfill a pledge to close the Guantánamo Bay detention center in Cuba, the Irish justice minister, Dermot Ahern, said Wednesday that his country would accept two prisoners from the facility for

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/30/world/europe/30gitmo.html
July 30, 2009
Ireland to Accept Two Guantánamo Detainees
By ALAN COWELL [Ireland] [UK] [the rather unpopular Bush administration either couldn’t impose on others to accept US held detainees (of 3rd countries) or didn’t push it very intently] [whichever the case, the Obama admoinistration has had some success (albeit marginal) what with Bremuda and now Ireland] [Ireland’s taking 2 is some heavy lifting?] [how will they every manage to blend in with two of them?] [followup] [potentially a reason why it’s better to be liked than feared?] [the Machiavelli dualism] [use psci355, 350] [*]
PARIS — As the Obama administration struggles to fulfill a pledge to close the Guantánamo Bay detention center in Cuba, the Irish justice minister, Dermot Ahern, said Wednesday that his country would accept two prisoners from the facility for resettlement, one of the few European nations to do so. [that’s a load off for the administration—now they only have another 60 or so to go and at this blistering rate or exchange, the will have them all farmed out by the end of Obama’s 3nd term] [*]

In a statement in Dublin, Mr. Ahern said the decision followed a visit to the camp by Irish officials last week. The agreement was confirmed Wednesday when Mr. Ahern met the newly arrived American ambassador, Dan Rooney, the Justice Ministry said in a statement.

Mr. Ahern said he had been the first European official to call for the closure of the camp.

“In making this decision I am conscious of the intention of the United States to close the center at Guantánamo Bay, in part by transferring detainees, no longer regarded as posing a threat to security but who cannot return to their own countries, to other countries willing to accept them.”

While the two men being accepted by Ireland were not formally being admitted as refugees, Mr. Ahern said, the Irish authorities would “adhere to the norms of official procedure in respecting the rights of the two men to their privacy,” meaning that there would be no public disclosure of personal information about them, their families or their travel to Ireland. [*]

He said the men would be transferred “within the next couple of months” and urged people “to allow them time and space to adjust to their new circumstances when they arrive.”

The Obama administration has pledged to close the camp by next January. But the administration faces an array of legal, political and logistical obstacles.

By mid-July, lawyers reviewing each detainee’s case had completed the initial sorting process for only about half the total Guantánamo population of 229 men, though officials said that by October they expected to complete the initial evaluations of who could be transferred to other countries, prosecuted or detained without charges. [they don’t even have a firm number?] [*]

At the same, prosecutors are trying to decide who among the detainees to be sent to American detention centers would face charges in federal criminal courts, and who would be tried by military commissions. The evidentiary and procedural rules for those tribunals have not yet been completed.

The fate of one of the youngest detainees at the prison is also emerging as a major test of whether the courts or the president has the final authority over when prisoners are released.

After a federal judge said this month that the government’s case for holding the detainee, Mohammed Jawad, was “riddled with holes,” the Obama administration conceded defeat and agreed that Mr. Jawad would no longer be considered a military detainee. But the administration said it would still hold him for possible prosecution in the United States.

President Obama urged European countries several months ago to assist in closing down the camp by taking detainees for resettlement. But the idea has proven unpopular with America’s European allies, many of whom were vocal in calling for the camp to be closed.

In a symbolic gesture last April, President Nicolas Sarkozy said that France would accept a single prisoner from Guantánamo to assist the United States’ plan. President Obama said last month that Italy has agreed to take three. [*]

In June, the European Union agreed to a framework for member states to admit detainees from the camp, requiring those who accept prisoners to share information about them with other European countries.

The agreement does not specify which countries would accept detainees, nor how many. Resistance to resettling the detainees has become a multinational issue in Europe because most of the 27 nations in the bloc share open borders.

While the Irish authorities did not identify the detainees, The Associated Press quoted two government officials with knowledge of the case as saying both men are Uzbek nationals.
One, Oybek Jabbarov, 31, has been the focus of several months’ campaigning by Irish human rights groups seeking to bring him to Ireland, The A.P. reported, saying that the officials who provided the information spoke on condition of anonymity because they were breaching the government’s official position.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Britain: Allegations Over Detainee

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/europe/29briefs-Britain.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | Europe
Britain: Allegations Over Detainee
By REUTERS [UK] [London] [Britain’s own rather nasty problems with detainees and prosecuting jihadis] [rule of law, habeus, and the like] [hydra] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader problem using regular legal proceedings for somewhat irregular transnational or something entirely different] [followup] [extraordinary renditions—seldom do we hear about others doing it] [I imagine others don’t normally do it as it takes a certain level of power-influence in the world political system to effect it] [*]
Human rights lawyers took legal action against the British government on Tuesday, accusing it of involvement in the illegal transfer of a terrorism suspect from Indonesia to

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/europe/29briefs-Britain.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | Europe
Britain: Allegations Over Detainee
By REUTERS [UK] [London] [Britain’s own rather nasty problems with detainees and prosecuting jihadis] [rule of law, habeus, and the like] [hydra] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader problem using regular legal proceedings for somewhat irregular transnational or something entirely different] [followup] [extraordinary renditions—seldom do we hear about others doing it] [I imagine others don’t normally do it as it takes a certain level of power-influence in the world political system to effect it] [*]
Human rights lawyers took legal action against the British government on Tuesday, accusing it of involvement in the illegal transfer of a terrorism suspect from Indonesia to Egypt where they say he was tortured. [*]Reprieve, a London-based rights group, says Britain knowingly allowed the suspect, Mohammed Saad Iqbal Madni, above, to be sent from Jakarta to Egypt via an American air base on Diego Garcia, a British-ruled island in the Indian Ocean, [*]in 2002. Mr. Madni says he was tortured with cattle prods for three months in Egypt, then sent to Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, where he was held for six years before being released last August without having been charged. [look at the bright side?] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iraq Can’t Defend Its Skies by Pullout Date, U.S. Says

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29military.html
July 29, 2009
Iraq Can’t Defend Its Skies by Pullout Date, U.S. Says
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [in what appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [[US troops continue toward withdrawal at the end of 2010]] [*]
BAGHDAD — The Iraqis will be unable to handle their own air defenses after all American troops withdraw from the country by the end of 2011, the top commander of American forces in Iraq said Tuesday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29military.html
July 29, 2009
Iraq Can’t Defend Its Skies by Pullout Date, U.S. Says
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [in what appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [[US troops continue toward withdrawal at the end of 2010]] [*]
BAGHDAD — The Iraqis will be unable to handle their own air defenses after all American troops withdraw from the country by the end of 2011, the top commander of American forces in Iraq said Tuesday.

The commander, Gen. Ray Odierno, in comments to reporters traveling here with Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, did not directly say that American planes and pilots might effectively have to serve as an Iraqi air force until the Iraqis were ready to defend their country’s airspace on their own. [*]But he said that a United States Air Force team was expected soon in Iraq to assess what the United States could, and should, do.

Iraqis have already asked the United States for new F-16 fighter jets, but General Odierno said it would be impossible to build and deliver them by the end of 2011, even if the Iraqis were able to afford them. [see them the jets; just put backdoor into their avionics so the US can bring them down in a instant; then we’ll see sovereignty] [*]

Asked if the Iraqis would be in a position to fly their own defensive air patrols at the end of 2011, when a United States agreement with Iraq calls for all American troops to be out of the country, General Odierno replied, “Right now, no.”

Although the United States has long known that the Iraqis will have no air defenses once the Americans leave, General Odierno’s comments, made at his chandeliered headquarters at one of Saddam Hussein’s former palaces, were among the most public and blunt assessments of the problem. [since the July withdrawal from the cities, there’s been a lot of that (bluntness) going around from both sides, but mostly from the –iraqis] [it surely feels good for Odierno to dish a little back] [*]The trip by Mr. Gates was meant to celebrate the June 30 withdrawal of most American combat forces from Iraqi cities and towns and to highlight the progress that the Americans say the Iraqi security forces have made on their own.

The Air Force team that is coming to Iraq will try to come up with “creative solutions” to the problem, General Odierno said. One answer may be for the United States to lend the Iraqis old F-16s, although “we don’t know if it’s legal; we have to check with Congress,” the general said. [lend them?] [how about lease them along with US pilots?] [*]

In the meantime, he said, there were plenty of questions: “Will they be able to depend on radar? Is that enough? Will they ask for support? Can they get aircraft from some other country?”

For now, the Iraqi Air Force has helicopters and C-130 transport planes, but no fighter jets, and therefore no way to intercept another jet that invades the country’s airspace. Another major problem, which General Odierno did not address, is the lack of qualified pilots and a large-scale training program.

General Odierno spoke at the end of a long day in Iraq for Mr. Gates, who arrived unannounced in the dust blasts and 115-degree heat to promote what he said was the progress the Americans were making in allowing Iraqi forces to take the lead in security operations. [only unannounced for security reasons] [don’t make it sounds like some last second hail mary] [*]

There have been some tensions since the Americans moved into their new subordinate role after the June 30 withdrawal. General Odierno acknowledged that the situation was “not perfect,” and commanders here said it was frustrating to defer to the Iraqis when they believed that they could handle security issues better themselves. [*]But Mr. Gates sidestepped those problems. [as Americans, we deeply desire for everybody to heap praise on us for all our help and when they don’t they are unbelievable ingrates] [*]

“There is a sense of equal parts in this now, and nobody is the boss, or the occupier, or however you want to put it,” Mr. Gates said on his first stop of the day, Tallil Air Base in southern Iraq, where the United States is assembling its first Advisory and Assistance Brigade, in essence a combat brigade of 3,000 to 5,000 soldiers with more officers, sergeants and others to train the Iraqis.

It was Mr. Gates’s first visit to Iraq this year and his 10th since becoming defense secretary more than two and a half years ago, when violence was surging in Iraq and the Bush administration made the decision to add tens of thousands of troops. Although there are still periodic attacks, violence is now generally down across the country. “I will tell you, it is amazingly different from December 2006,” Mr. Gates told American troops at Tallil.

The defense secretary met later with the Iraqi prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, to talk about preparations for a major reduction of American troops next year. If the schedule holds, 80,000 are expected to leave Iraq between March and August 2010. About 130,000 American troops are now here. Defense Department officials say they anticipate leaving behind a “residual force” of 50,000 [note: for longest time they said 30,00-50,000 and now they tend to leave the low end out?] [*]by the end of next summer. Under an agreement with the Iraqis, all American troops are to be out of Iraq a little more than a year later, by the end of 2011.
Although Mr. Maliki appeared to suggest during a visit to the White House last week that the Iraqis might want some American troops beyond 2011, both Mr. Gates and General Odierno ruled out any talk of that now.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iraq Force Soon to Be a Coalition of One

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iraq.html
July 29, 2009
Iraq Force Soon to Be a Coalition of One
By ROD NORDLAND and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [US troops continue toward withdrawal at the end of 2010] [*]
BAGHDAD — Commanders of the Multi-National Force-Iraq, as the American-led coalition is formally called, have a looming nomenclature problem. [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iraq.html
July 29, 2009
Iraq Force Soon to Be a Coalition of One
By ROD NORDLAND and TIMOTHY WILLIAMS [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [US troops continue toward withdrawal at the end of 2010] [*]
BAGHDAD — Commanders of the Multi-National Force-Iraq, as the American-led coalition is formally called, have a looming nomenclature problem. [*]

Two days from now, there will no longer be any other nations with troops in Iraq — no “multi” in the Multi-National Force. As Iraqi forces have increasingly taken the lead, the United States is the last of the “coalition of the willing” [*]that the Bush administration first brought together in 2003. [let’s call it the coalition of the unwilling] [*]

That is partly because the Iraqi Parliament left suddenly for summer recess without voting to extend an agreement for the British military to keep a residual training force of 100 soldiers in Iraq. As a result, those troops must withdraw to Kuwait by Friday, according to a British diplomat, who declined to be identified in keeping with his government’s practice.

As for the other two small remnants of the coalition, the Romanians and Australians, the Australians will be gone by July 31, too, and the Romanians left last Thursday, according to the Romanian chargé d’affaires, [damn] [*]Cristian Voicu. NATO will keep a small training presence in Iraq, but its troops were never considered part of the Multi-National Force because of opposition to the war from many NATO countries.

In response to a query, American military officials acknowledged the need for a name change, and said Multi-National Force-Iraq would officially become United States Force-Iraq as of Jan. 1, 2010, according to the deputy coalition spokesman, Lt. Col. Mike Stewart. “This is done to reflect the new bilateral relationship between U.S. forces and our Iraqi hosts,” he said.

Even that relationship is being redefined, as the American military undergoes the complex process of withdrawing 130,000 soldiers over the next two years while shifting much of its attention to Afghanistan. As one Marine officer in Anbar Province said recently, “We’re so out of here.”

The phrase coalition of the willing became widespread after it was used by Secretary of State Colin L. Powell before the American invasion, though from the start the title never got much respect. When it became clear that the United Nations was unwilling to back military action against Iraq, Mr. Powell named 30 countries that would pitch in. Nations contributing troops included Tonga, Mongolia, Nicaragua and Latvia. In all, 38 nations sent soldiers over the past six years, typically in groups numbering in the low hundreds, in rotations that were usually brief and sometimes even furtive. Japan sent a force but announced that it would not fight. Dutch troops had to be deployed just to guard it.

Iceland sent the smallest contingent, even before it cut its force in half — which left only one Icelandic soldier in Iraq. [thank god for that stong relationship between Iceland (formerly under the subjugation of those darn Danes) and the US] [you can’t buy that kind of loyalty] [ranged anywhere from 1-2 troops over time—in other words, the Icelanders willing doubled their troop numbers when the US needed help] [*]

Many coalition contributors lost soldiers in Iraq. Britain suffered the most, with 179 killed, since its troops were deployed in the restive southern province of Basra. The other 37 contributors lost a total of 139 soldiers. American fatalities have exceeded 4,300.

The disproportionate number of coalition casualties reflects the roles of the different forces. Their chief utility was to free American soldiers from routine but necessary duties. Georgia’s fairly large contingent handled all the checkpoints in the fortified Green Zone of Baghdad, for instance, and brooked no arguments from people trying to enter, especially since few of the soldiers spoke anything but Russian or Georgian. [and we’ve seen time and again, unlike Iceland where friendship is plenty reward, what the Georgians expect out of their contingent: NATO, etc] [*]

The deployment was popular with the Georgians, who often were seen buying reduced-price televisions and stereos at the PX to send home for resale. The country’s contribution grew to a peak of 2,000, until the soldiers were abruptly withdrawn last August and rushed home to defend Georgia after the Russians invaded.

Britain had stayed despite growing criticism at home, but its forces steadily diminished until only 100 remained this month.

The security agreement with Britain was stalled in the Iraqi Parliament by opposition from the Sadrist Bloc, followers of the militant Shiite cleric Moktada al-Sadr, despite support from the Iraqi government.

Parliament will not reconvene until Sept. 8. A British diplomat suggested that the government might grant some temporary extension, but an Iraqi government spokesman, Ali al-Dabbagh, said that would not be possible.

In Baghdad on Tuesday, a gang of armed men broke into a bank just after midnight, killing eight security guards and escaping with $6.3 million in Iraqi dinars. The American military said it feared that insurgents might use the money to recruit members and to buy weapons. [*] [have the –Iraqis hears of bank vaults?]

“While I cannot confirm that the attacks were terrorist-related, it does fit past trends of terrorist groups in Iraq of financing their operations through criminal enterprise, like kidnappings for ransom, robberies and black marketeering,” Maj. Dave Shoupe, a United States military spokesman in Iraq, wrote in an e-mail message.

Seven of the Iraqi guards were found bound and blindfolded with strips of tape placed over their mouths, the Iraqi police said. Each had been shot once in the head, and pillows had been used to muffle the sound, the police said.

The eighth dead guard, who the police suspect had helped the robbers, was not bound, but had also been shot once, the authorities said.

Several bank employees were questioned by the police on Tuesday.

The police officers and army personnel who had been stationed at two checkpoints near the bank were also questioned and have been suspended, an Iraqi police official said on the condition of anonymity because he was not cleared to speak to reporters.

In eastern Baghdad, a bomb placed on a motorcycle exploded Tuesday evening, killing at least eight people and wounding 13 others in the New Baghdad neighborhood, the Iraqi police said.
Mohammed Obeidi contributed reporting.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

New Kurdish Leader Asserts Agenda

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29kurds.html
July 29, 2009
New Kurdish Leader Asserts Agenda
By SAM DAGHER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [the rather unique and interesting political dynamics in Kurdistan] [ditto] [*]
ERBIL, Iraq — The president of the semiautonomous Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani, on Tuesday rejected proposals by the United Nations to resolve Iraq’s explosive internal border disputes, and reiterated his determination to proceed with a contentious local constitution. [that’s typical] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29kurds.html
July 29, 2009
New Kurdish Leader Asserts Agenda
By SAM DAGHER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [the rather unique and interesting political dynamics in Kurdistan] [ditto] [*]
ERBIL, Iraq — The president of the semiautonomous Kurdistan region, Massoud Barzani, on Tuesday rejected proposals by the United Nations to resolve Iraq’s explosive internal border disputes, and reiterated his determination to proceed with a contentious local constitution. [that’s typical] [*]

Mr. Barzani, newly empowered after winning an estimated 70 percent of the vote in the region’s presidential and parliamentary elections on Saturday, made the remarks in his first interview [*]with the news media since the vote.

“Regrettably, the recommendations of the United Nations are unrealistic,” Mr. Barzani said, referring to a report by the United Nations in April outlining options for the settlement of territorial disputes that threaten Iraq’s fragile stability. They included making Kirkuk Province — including the oil-rich city of Kirkuk that is claimed by Kurds, Sunni Arabs and Turkmens — into an autonomous region.

American officials have repeatedly stated their support for a United Nations-brokered solution. [again, no big surprise] [the US and the Kurds have split over these same issues time and again] [the US (dating back to Bush) desires the Kurds to integrate into larger Iraq but the Kurds truly want autonomy] [*]

“We will not accept that the United Nations or anyone else present us with alternatives to Article 140,” he added, referring to the clause in Iraq’s national Constitution that calls for a census followed by a referendum to settle the fate of areas including Kirkuk. [*]

Tensions have been aggravated by the presence of Kurdish troops in parts of the contested areas. The situation worsened in June when the region’s Parliament, overwhelmingly controlled by the two governing parties, including Mr. Barzani’s party, the Kurdistan Democratic Party, approved a draft constitution that enshrined Kurdish rights to the disputed territories.

Although the document states that the final demarcation of the region’s boundaries is subject to Article 140, it is unequivocal in its assertion that the disputed territories are inseparable from the “geographic and historic entity” called Iraq’s Kurdistan region. [*]

Mr. Barzani said one reason he agreed to put off a referendum on the regional Constitution that was to have been held during Saturday’s elections was a request this month from Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and other American officials.

“They asked if it was possible to postpone it because the timing was inappropriate,” he said.

Mr. Barzani said he was determined to put the constitution to a referendum this fall. Such a move would place him on a collision course not only with the central government, which opposes the document in its current form, but also with a new Kurdish political coalition that did surprisingly well on Saturday.

Shaho Saeed, a top official in the coalition, Gorran, said his movement filed a complaint this month with Iraq’s federal court in Baghdad that questioned the legitimacy of the process that the previous regional Parliament adopted to approve the constitution.

Mr. Saeed said Gorran opposed the document because it gave powers to Mr. Barzani “that exceed the powers of Parliament and the judiciary.” Gorran wants the proposed constitution redrafted, he said.

Although the region’s two governing parties, including the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, retain a comfortable majority to form the next government, Gorran appeared to have clinched at least 25 of the new Parliament’s 111 seats, according to preliminary results.

With the two parties expected to remain firmly in control of Parliament, Mr. Barzani said that no one has the two-thirds majority needed to redraft the document.

“The new Parliament has no right to redraft the constitution,” he said. “It is over.”

Mr. Barzani said he welcomed the emergence of an opposition movement like Gorran, but issued a warning to those who might interpret it as a loosening of the grip of the two parties that control the region’s security forces, economy and patronage network.

“If any regional country or even Baghdad interferes in an internal matter, or any individual inside the region conspires against the region’s security and well-being,” he said, “actions will be taken in accordance with the law against those who want to undermine the unity of the Kurdish house.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

After Kurdish Vote, Talabani Pledges to Rebuild Party

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072801246.html
After Kurdish Vote, Talabani Pledges to Rebuild Party
By Anthony Shadid
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [the rather unique and interesting political dynamics in Kurdistan] [*]
SULAYMANIYAH, Iraq, July 28 -- Facing what could prove a turning point in tumultuous Kurdish politics, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani vowed Tuesday that he would lead the revival of his party after a surprisingly successful challenge by opponents in last week's election led some to speculate that it might be the beginning of the party's end. [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072801246.html
After Kurdish Vote, Talabani Pledges to Rebuild Party
By Anthony Shadid
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [the rather unique and interesting political dynamics in Kurdistan] [*]
SULAYMANIYAH, Iraq, July 28 -- Facing what could prove a turning point in tumultuous Kurdish politics, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani vowed Tuesday that he would lead the revival of his party after a surprisingly successful challenge by opponents in last week's election led some to speculate that it might be the beginning of the party's end. [*]

In an interview, Talabani, the 75-year-old politician and former guerrilla who founded the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) more than 30 years ago, sought to cast the election results in the best light. But the success of the Change list, led by former Talabani colleagues , against an alliance of the PUK and the other leading Kurdish party clearly surprised him. [*]

More than a contest among parochial groups in a relatively quiet region, the struggle for political power in the Kurdish north could have sweeping repercussions for Iraq's mercurial politics. The alliance between Talabani's party and Kurdish President Massoud Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party has held for years, though no one has really forgotten the civil war they fought in the 1990s. [*]Their claim to represent Kurdish consensus is crucial, too, in negotiations with Baghdad over today's most pressing issues: a law to share Iraq's oil revenue and a resolution to the disputed border between Iraq's Arab and Kurdish regions.

Talabani promised that there would be changes in his party's program and added: "Surely there will be changes within the leadership." Despite his age and bouts with ill health, Talabani suggested the work would be his priority.

"President of Iraq is something temporary, but being a member of the PUK is something permanent," he said with an Iraqi flag behind his desk, one of the few in a region that enjoys a remarkable degree of autonomy from the government in Baghdad. [slam] [*]

Many expect Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to try to exploit Kurdish divisions in his feud with the autonomous region. Although official results in Saturday's election have yet to be announced, Change [sic.] is expected to hold almost as many seats as each of the two Kurdish ruling parties. A colleague of Talabani's said Talabani had expected Change to win just a few seats, far fewer than the 25 or so that it may wind up with in the 111-member parliament.

"When a group makes a revolution and seizes power, they say they have the right to lead the country," Talabani said, by way of defending the results. "In our country, on the contrary, we who led the revolution, we gave the chance to the people to decide."

Talabani is quick to smile and has an avuncular appeal, though there is still an edge to his words, testament to years he spent in mountains so inhospitable to foes. While he relishes the prospect of writing his memoirs, he said, he still believes he has more years to work with his party, a point on which not everyone agrees.

Discontent runs rife in Kurdish life over the dominance of the two parties, whose leadership exercises far more influence than the parliament itself. Complaints of corruption are rampant, as is frustration over nepotism and patronage. Despite Talabani's contention, the parties still treat their legitimacy as a war-won right.

"He's too old to do that," Muhammad Tofiq, a Change candidate and former colleague of Talabani's, said of Talabani's promise to lead the reform. "And the people around him, they all have their agendas. It's very difficult to see how they can rebuild it."

Talabani himself was buffeted by criticism from each direction. Some said he spent too much time in Baghdad, losing touch with his Kurdish constituency. He acknowledged the criticism. Others said that as Iraq's president, he belonged in Baghdad.

"He's a president, and he has much more important jobs to do," Mahmoud Othman, an independent Kurdish member of Iraq's parliament, said from his home in Baghdad. "Baghdad is most important to us. It's the capital. It's where our problems are going to be solved."

In both Baghdad and Irbil, the Kurdish capital, the challenges to Talabani are expected to proliferate in the months ahead. The dispute with the federal government has grown, with Kurdish leaders in Irbil warning that tension could erupt into bloodshed. Talabani, though, was much more conciliatory, even suggesting the possibility of an alliance with Maliki in January elections [?] [really?] [*]that will choose a new national parliament.

Although Barzani and Maliki have not talked in a year, and bitterness remains pronounced, Talabani predicted they would need to meet for a only few hours to reconcile.

"I think they can solve it in two meetings," he said.

The two Kurdish ruling parties, though, are themselves entering uncharted territory. They went into the election with a promise to evenly split their share of parliament seats. Barham Salih, a Talabani ally and Iraq's deputy prime minister, was supposed to become the Kurdish region's prime minister. But even before Change won most of its votes in Talabani's stronghold of Sulaymaniyah, Barzani's officials began questioning, sometimes bluntly, why they shouldn't retain the post. The speculation only mounted after the votes were tallied. [*]

Talabani was dismissive. He planned to meet Barzani on Wednesday to lock up the deal. "There's no doubt," he said of Salih's chances.

Most threatening, though, may be the test posed by his party's dissidents, some of whom he said he has known for as long as 50 years. The revolt was led by Talabani's former deputy, Nosherwan Mustafa, who has vowed to overturn the party's hegemony over public life. His critics call him an architect of that very hegemony. [*]

"There was no number two or number three in the PUK," Mustafa said. "There was only number one." [*]

"I'm telling you very frankly, I'm very glad they left the PUK," Talabani answered. "They were our main problem and our main headaches for years and years."

But, he added, if he saw Mustafa tomorrow, he would offer only kind words.
"I would congratulate him that he got seats in parliament," he said.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Iraq Raids Camp of Exiles From Iran

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803192.html
Iraq Raids Camp of Exiles From Iran
Move Seen as Sign Tehran Is Eclipsing American Influence
By Ernesto Londoño and Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s govt increasingly taking up its own security needs has just sent a shot across the bow of America while cleaning out an a group whose purpose includes overthrow of Tehran regime] [while it appears a cozy situation with Iran I’m not sure that’s its nature] [*]
BAGHDAD, July 28 -- Iraqi troops and police carried out a bloody raid Tuesday on the camp of an Iranian opposition group that the United States has long sheltered, marking the Iraqi government's boldest move since it declared its sovereignty [*] [certainly interesting and will rev up the Sunni folk at least] [*] a month ago and offering the latest

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803192.html
Iraq Raids Camp of Exiles From Iran
Move Seen as Sign Tehran Is Eclipsing American Influence
By Ernesto Londoño and Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [“surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [-ir’s govt increasingly taking up its own security needs has just sent a shot across the bow of America while cleaning out an a group whose purpose includes overthrow of Tehran regime] [while it appears a cozy situation with Iran I’m not sure that’s its nature] [*]
BAGHDAD, July 28 -- Iraqi troops and police carried out a bloody raid Tuesday on the camp of an Iranian opposition group that the United States has long sheltered, marking the Iraqi government's boldest move since it declared its sovereignty [*] [certainly interesting and will rev up the Sunni folk at least] [*] a month ago and offering the latest sign that American influence is waning as Iranian clout rises.

The operation, which caught U.S. officials off guard, coincided with a visit by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, and analysts said it appeared designed to send a message of Iraqi independence. [subtle as a chainsaw] [*]

The Mujaheddin-e Khalq, or MEK, has supplied information about Iran's nuclear program to the United States, but the group has long been an irritant to the Islamic republic, which has repeatedly asked the government of neighboring Iraq to expel MEK members. [the US has a thing for this an other groups] [and that has created problems with US-Iran relations] [*] The way Baghdad deals with the group is widely seen as a signal of whether Iraq is more heavily swayed by Iran or by the United States. [if –iraqi leaders are smart they will continually attempt to play off US interests against Iranian ones and vice versa—a type of triangular diplomacy as witnessed during the cold war with the US, USSR, PRC] [*]

Leaders of the group said Iraqi troops fatally shot four residents Tuesday night and wounded scores. U.S. officials have long opposed a violent takeover of the camp northeast of Baghdad, and the Iraqi government's willingness to carry out the raid while Gates was in the country startled some American officials. [*]

Gen. Ray Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, said American officials did not oppose an assault on the camp as long as troops treated residents humanely. He said initial reports from Iraqi commanders indicated that their troops had not used lethal force and that no one had been killed. [-iraqis must go out of their ways intitially to ensure the US and others understand what it means for –iraqis to exercise their sovereignty] [so some percent of this stuff is symbolic] [*]

"We didn't know they were going to do this," Odierno said Tuesday night. "We had no prior warning."

Kenneth Katzman, a senior Iraq expert at the Congressional Research Service, the research arm of Congress, called the raid "very serious" and said it was disturbing that it coincided with Gates's visit. [not really, just pointed and symbolic and it appears to have caught the Americans’ attention which was the point] [*]

"It suggests that as the Iraqi government is increasingly independent of the United States, it might use this freedom of action to 'settle scores' with its opponents or act on behalf of outside benefactors," he said in an e-mail. "In this case, the attack would appear to be at the behest of Iran, which has accused [the MEK] of involvement in the recent internal unrest" in Iran.

Residents of Camp Ashraf, home to more than 3,000 people, said in phone interviews that hundreds of Iraqi troops and police officers gathered outside the camp in the afternoon. Driving armored Humvees donated by the U.S. military, Iraqi troops in riot gear barreled through one of the camp's gates and clashed with people forming a human shield, [a little funny (ironic in strange way) that in displaying their strong independence from the US, they had to do so using almost entirely US equipment!] [*] according to residents.

The troops used batons, fire hoses, pepper spray, sound grenades and riot shields to plow through the hundreds-strong crowd, residents said. Group leaders said that at least 300 people were wounded in the clashes.

"They sprayed the residents with hot water and beat them with batons," resident Safa Mohammed said in a phone interview. "They beat them with rocks. We tried to push them back, but, as you know, we don't have any weapons." [*]

The accounts could not be independently corroborated. Photographs and video clips that camp residents e-mailed to reporters showed residents being beaten. Other photos and videos showed bloodied men being stitched up at the camp's clinic.

"This is a crime against humanity," the group's leader, Maryam Rajavi, said in a phone interview from Rome. "I'm really shocked. The American forces were present and allowed this attack to take place."

Group leaders said Tuesday that at least nine members were taken into custody.

Since the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraqi cities on June 30, Iraqi commanders have acted with unprecedented autonomy, and in some areas, they have actively sought to marginalize their American counterparts. Senior Iraqi officials billed the date, the first of three deadlines that chart the U.S. withdrawal, as an independence day of sorts. [I don’t know why US malcontents make so much trouble over it] [put yourself in their position: it’s perfectly understandable that they would feel compelled to demonstrate their independence dramatically; once things settle in and they are confident in their sovereigtny (something they’ve not had in long time, the Shi’a majority in many generations), I imagine it will reduce some] [*]

A small contingent of U.S. soldiers remained at a base outside the camp after the Iraqi government assumed nominal control of it Jan. 1. "The Americans were at the scene, but they didn't move a finger," said Behzad Saffari, one of the camp's leaders, who reported witnessing the clashes. "They just stood there taking pictures." [*]

The U.S. military would not confirm that American soldiers were present. It referred an inquiry to the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad. An embassy spokeswoman said all questions should be addressed to the Iraqi government.

Iraqi officials said the operation's goal was to establish a police station inside the camp, widely seen as the first step toward evicting residents. The government considers the group a cult with a terrorist past and resents that the United States protected the MEK camp for six years. [and it’s been especially irritating since the US encourages the group and there’s some evidence the US has armed them and shared intelligence with them insofar as MEK has cause problems for Tehran, which they wish to overthrow] [*]

A day before the raid, the Iraqi government had announced plans to assert full control over the camp.

Parliament member Ali al-Adeeb, a confidant of Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, said the government resorted to force after several failed attempts to take control of the camp and expel the residents through other means.

"For now, the main gates of Ashraf are controlled by the Iraqi forces," he said. Although he acknowledged the clashes, he said MEK leaders were probably exaggerating the number of casualties to generate "media clamor."

In what might signal a realization that their indefinite presence at Ashraf is untenable as the United States starts to withdraw from Iraq, the group's leaders announced late Monday that members were willing to return to Iran under certain conditions. It was the first time the group had suggested that a large number of its members would be willing to return home.

But the conditions it has laid out seem unrealistic. The MEK said members would return if Iran promised in writing to the United Nations, the International Committee of the Red Cross, the United States and Iraq that residents who went back would not be arrested and would enjoy freedom of speech. [I’m not quite sure how the US can guarantee anything in another country?] [*]

The U.S. military has maintained a presence at the camp since 2003, when the group, an erstwhile ally of Saddam Hussein, agreed to disarm. The MEK was founded in the 1960s by Marxist university students. It morphed into a guerrilla organization that attacked Iranian and U.S. officials in Iran during the 1970s. After the 1979 Islamic revolution, its main purpose was to overthrow the regime. [*] Because its members attacked U.S. citizens in Iran years ago, the State Department labels the group a terrorist organization. [but this is slight of hand as the Bush administration supported the group using other insurgents that function along the Turkey-Iraqi-Iranian borders in the mountains] [*]

During the war between Iran and Iraq in the 1980s, MEK members were given refuge in Hussein's Iraq, and they are widely suspected to have participated in violent crackdowns against Kurdish and Shiite uprisings.

Elsewhere in Iraq on Tuesday, 16 people were killed in Baghdad in two incidents, an Iraqi security official said. Eight were killed in a motorcycle bombing in New Baghdad, a district in the eastern part of the capital. In upscale Karrada, a central Baghdad neighborhood, eight people were slain in a bank heist.
Special correspondents Aziz Alwan and Qais Mizher contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

U.N. Worker May Be Flogged Over Attire

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803015.html
World Digest
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
SUDAN
U.N. Worker May Be Flogged Over Attire
[Sudan] [Middle East proper, though also Horn of Africa] [northern Africa] [proximity to Arabian peninsula and Islamic Maghreb] [Africa’s curse of colonial borders that stitched together tribes with utter animus and cleaved others that should have been together] [colonial expediency rather than what made sense for Africa] [Sharia, custom, and the rest] [use ir text] [use psci350] [UN employee to be flogged for wearing pants?] [surely this stems from some odd custom at time (7th century) and not anything in particular that anybody’s god would have trouble with?] [*]
A Sudanese woman who works for a U.N. peacekeeping mission in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, is bracing to be flogged 40 times Wednesday, the penalty under Islamic law for wearing clothing -- in her case, pants -- "causing harassment to the public sentiments." [hum, interesting] [so if they were to apply the harassment-of-public

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803015.html
World Digest
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
SUDAN
U.N. Worker May Be Flogged Over Attire
[Sudan] [Middle East proper, though also Horn of Africa] [northern Africa] [proximity to Arabian peninsula and Islamic Maghreb] [Africa’s curse of colonial borders that stitched together tribes with utter animus and cleaved others that should have been together] [colonial expediency rather than what made sense for Africa] [Sharia, custom, and the rest] [use ir text] [use psci350] [UN employee to be flogged for wearing pants?] [surely this stems from some odd custom at time (7th century) and not anything in particular that anybody’s god would have trouble with?] [*]
A Sudanese woman who works for a U.N. peacekeeping mission in Sudan's capital, Khartoum, is bracing to be flogged 40 times Wednesday, the penalty under Islamic law for wearing clothing -- in her case, pants -- "causing harassment to the public sentiments." [hum, interesting] [so if they were to apply the harassment-of-public sentiment standard universally, somebody driving an odd care that created a stir or being seen with a kaffir or whatever would necessarily result in flogging?] [*]

Lubna Ahmed Hussein has invited local and foreign journalists to view her flogging if she is convicted. “Maybe I’ll be punished. The judge will decide,” she said Tuesday. “I’m not afraid.” [*]

Hussein and 13 other women were at a Khartoum cafe on July 3 when police ordered them to a police station, according to Agence France-Presse. All the women were wearing pants. [*]Two days later, 10 of the women were called back and lashed 10 times each, the agency said.
-- Stephanie McCrummen
PAKISTAN
Holbrooke Urges E.U. To Boost Refugee Aid [*]
The U.S. envoy to Pakistan and Afghanistan urged European Union nations Tuesday to increase aid to people who have fled fighting near the border, warning that the crisis could undermine the fight against insurgents.

"Right now, I would say, refugee relief assistance in the reconstruction phase in Pakistan is the most urgent issue," Ambassador Richard C. Holbrooke told reporters at NATO headquarters in Brussels.

"This is more than a humanitarian crisis, this is a strategic issue as well, because those refugees are in the exact area where al-Qaeda and the Taliban are," he said after talks here with NATO, E.U. and Belgian [*] [keep it up and perhaps (though I doubt it) some of the Europeans will be shamed into action] [*]government officials.

Pakistan launched a military offensive under U.S. pressure after Taliban fighters marched into the district of Buner in April, putting them within 60 miles of the capital, Islamabad.
-- Agence France-Presse
ISRAEL
Premier, U.S. Envoy Report 'Progress'
Israel's prime minister and the top U.S. Mideast envoy said they made progress Tuesday on their dispute over West Bank settlements at a meeting in Jerusalem but offered no sign of a breakthrough. [*] [in that context ending a meeting without name calling and a brawl might reasonably be seen as progress] [*]

President Obama's envoy, George J. Mitchell, has pressed Israel to halt construction in settlements on captured land claimed by the Palestinians. But Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu says limited construction must be permitted to allow "natural growth" in the settler population.

Netanyahu and Mitchell reported "progress" after their meeting but did not say how close they were to a breakthrough. The settlement issue has given rise to the sharpest public tension between Israel and its main ally in nearly two decades.
-- Associated Press
NIGERIA
Troops Surround Militant Hideout [see elsewhere in today’s ext] [*]
Troops traded fire with Islamist fighters Tuesday and sent armored vehicles to surround the suspected hideout of a radical Muslim leader accused of orchestrating a three-day burst of violence that has left at least 55 people dead in Africa's most populous nation.

A tense calm returned to several towns elsewhere in northern Nigeria after authorities imposed curfews and poured security forces onto the streets.

Sporadic gunfire was reported through the day in Maiduguri, capital of Borno state, where some of the worst violence occurred Monday. Later, the army sent armored vehicles to a district where it says militant leader Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf may be holed up.
-- Associated Press
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Iran Releases 140 Protesters, Closes Prison Over Conditions

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802711.html
Iran Releases 140 Protesters, Closes Prison Over Conditions
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [more pressure on Ahmadinejad and Iran image?] [followup] [desperation time?] [*]
TEHRAN, July 28 -- In an apparent response Tuesday to allegations of abuses, Iran freed 140 opposition activists detained during election protests this summer and the

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072802711.html
Iran Releases 140 Protesters, Closes Prison Over Conditions
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [more pressure on Ahmadinejad and Iran image?] [followup] [desperation time?] [*]
TEHRAN, July 28 -- In an apparent response Tuesday to allegations of abuses, Iran freed 140 opposition activists detained during election protests this summer and the country's supreme leader ordered a prison closed because of substandard conditions. The developments followed local news reports that four activists have died in custody in recent days.

However, the Interior Ministry turned down a request by opposition leaders for permission to hold an event commemorating protesters killed in the crackdown after the disputed June 12 presidential election.

The release of the 140 activists from Evin prison, one of Tehran's two main detention facilities, came after a visit by a special parliamentary committee, the semiofficial Fars News Agency reported. Those freed were not named, but the prominent women's rights activist Shadi Sadr was reported to have been among them, released on bail. Sadr was arrested July 17.

The city's other main prison, Kahrizak, was closed after an order Monday by the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, according to the semiofficial Mehr News Agency. It is unclear whether the detainees there have been transferred or freed.

"Kahrizak is basically a big warehouse. Citizenship rights are not respected there," [*]said Darius Ghanbari, spokesman of the parliamentary faction that is close to the opposition. "Interrogators routinely beat up prisoners. It has none of the necessary standards for a detention center. There are not even toilets. Diseases are rampant."

Lawmaker Kazem Jalali said Kahrizak had been ordered closed because "it did not possess the standards required to ensure the rights of the detainees," Mehr News reported. Jalali was part of the committee that visited Evin prison Tuesday ahead of the detainees' release.

"Of those we visited, there was not even one individual who had any complaints about Evin prison," he told state television.

Jalali said 150 people remain in various detention facilities throughout Iran, along with 50 political figures who are accused of masterminding the recent unrest or of belonging to subversive groups.

Several members of political factions close to opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi are still missing, as are well-known artists and journalists, including Maziar Bahari, Newsweek's Tehran correspondent, who was arrested June 21.

Like all other requests for official gatherings by the opposition, a demand for a permit to hold a silent gathering in Tehran's huge Mossala prayer ground Thursday was turned down by President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government. Thursday will be the 40th day since the death of Neda Agha Soltan, a 27-year-old fatally shot [what this piece neglects to note is the significance of the 40th day of mourning in Shi’a theology] [*] during a demonstration. Her final moments were captured on cellphone video and broadcast around the world.
Opposition Web sites urged people to attend, anyway, setting up the possibility of further clashes with security forces.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Reports of Prison Abuse and Deaths Anger Iranians

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html
July 29, 2009
Reports of Prison Abuse and Deaths Anger Iranians
By ROBERT F. WORTH [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [more pressure on Ahmadinejad and Iran image?] [followup] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Some prisoners say they watched fellow detainees being beaten to death by guards in overcrowded, stinking holding pens. Others say they

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29iran.html
July 29, 2009
Reports of Prison Abuse and Deaths Anger Iranians
By ROBERT F. WORTH [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [more pressure on Ahmadinejad and Iran image?] [followup] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Some prisoners say they watched fellow detainees being beaten to death by guards in overcrowded, stinking holding pens. Others say they had their fingernails ripped off or were forced to lick filthy toilet bowls. [what?] [*]

The accounts of prison abuse in Iran’s postelection crackdown — relayed by relatives and on opposition Web sites — have set off growing outrage among Iranians, including some prominent conservatives. More bruised corpses have been returned to families in recent days, and some hospital officials have told human rights workers that they have seen evidence that well over 100 protesters have died since the vote. [as many of us suspected when we kept reading of only 20 deaths] [*]

On Tuesday, the government released 140 prisoners in one of several conciliatory gestures aimed at deflecting further criticism. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad issued a letter urging the head of the judiciary to show “Islamic mercy” to the detainees, and on Monday Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, personally intervened and closed an especially notorious detention center. [the pressure is having desired effects on thugocracy] [and it may well cause additional friction between supreme leader and his onetime acolyte, President Ahmadinejad] [*]

But there are signs that widespread public anger persists, and that it is not confined to those who took to the streets crying fraud after Mr. Ahmadinejad’s landslide victory last month. Several conservatives have said the abuse suggests a troubling lack of accountability, and they have hinted at a link with Mr. Ahmadinejad’s recent willingness to defy even the venerated Ayatollah Khamenei. [*] [if leadership was at the ready I could see some substantial activity about now] [*]

“Why did things have to go so far as to require the personal intervention of the supreme leader?” said Ali Mottahari, a conservative Parliament member. “If we are satisfied just to close one detention center, these people will continue to do what they have done elsewhere and nothing will change.”

Although the government has played down the scale of the prison abuses, some detainees’ relatives have come forward recently to confirm them, mostly to opposition-linked Web sites that have provided credible information in the past, [*]including roozonline.com and gooya.com.

Some deaths have been further documented with photographs or videotapes. Hospital officials have described receiving bodies of those killed in protests, with the total far in excess of 20, the government’s initial figure. It is difficult to confirm [*]such reports independently, given the restrictions on reporting in Iran.

The anger has spread from opposition supporters into Iran’s hard-line camp in part because of the case of Mohsen Ruholamini, [a week or so now and the parent’s agonized feelings were raw and are apparently mixing things up considerably] [*] the son of an adviser to the conservative presidential candidate Mohsen Rezai, who died in prison after a severe beating. A bitter political dispute among conservatives over Mr. Ahmadinejad’s cabinet decisions may also have helped fuel the issue.

The prison abuses have also galvanized the opposition movement, whose leaders asked for permission to hold a mass mourning ceremony on Thursday in honor of those killed since the election. The Interior Ministry on Tuesday refused permission for the gathering, but the main opposition leaders, Mir Hussein Moussavi and Mehdi Karroubi, said they would hold a public ceremony anyway, [*]several Web sites reported.

Thursday is a day of unusual symbolic importance because it will be 40 days since the shooting of Neda Agha-Soltan, [*]a young woman whose death during a demonstration was captured on video and ignited outrage across the globe. The 40th day marks an important Shiite mourning ritual; similar commemorations for dead protesters fueled the demonstrations that led to the Islamic Revolution in 1979. [I don’t remember reading that before?] [*]

Questions about the prison abuse have gained more importance in recent days, not only because of the opposition’s public protests but also because the stories have multiplied. [*] One young man posted an account on Tuesday of his ordeal at the Kahrizak camp, which was ordered closed on Monday by Ayatollah Khamenei.

“We were all standing so close to each other that no one could move,” he wrote in a narrative posted online. “The plainclothes guards came into the room and broke all the light bulbs, and in the pitch dark started beating us, whoever they could.” By morning, at least four detainees were dead, [*] [Basij] he added.

In another account posted online, a former detainee describes being made to lie facedown on the floor of a police station bathroom, where an officer would step on his neck and force him to lick the toilet bowl as the officer cursed reformist politicians.

A woman described having her hair pulled as interrogators demanded that she confess to having sex with political figures. When she was finally released, she was forced — like many others — to sign a paper saying she had never been mistreated. [*]

Mr. Moussavi spoke out Monday in unusually strong and angry terms, accusing the government of brutality and irreligion, and warning that its conduct toward the detainees could set off a much greater reaction.

“They cannot turn this nation into a prison of 70 million people,” Mr. Moussavi said, adding later that “the more people they arrest, the more widespread the movement will become.”

The prisoner release on Tuesday appeared to be the act of a government desperate to defuse the issue, coming just one day after the head of Iran’s judiciary promised that the detainees’ cases would be expedited. Government officials say that of at least 2,500 people arrested in the postelection crackdown, about 150 remain in prison. [I’d be willing to bet the thugocracy is still covering up numbers—it’s likely higher and perhaps significantly so] [*]

In announcing the release, Saeed Jalili, the secretary of the National Security Council of Iran, sounded a defensive note, saying that those still in jail “are people for whom there are documents stating they were in possession of firebombs and weapons, including firearms, and who had caused serious damage to public property.”

But Mr. Mottahari, the lawmaker, said Tuesday that those responsible for the deaths of detainees must also be identified and punished. Others have gone further, saying the prison abuses suggest a government lurching dangerously out of control. [too late; it’s hell and gone past control] [*]

“Those who have turned this society into a police state and have ordered the use of force have to be held accountable,” said Hamid-Reza Katouzian, a hard-line member of Parliament. “The police and the Ministry of Intelligence have told us that they are on the sidelines, and we do not know who is responsible or accountable.”

Mr. Katouzian is a close friend of Mr. Ruholamini’s family, and his comments appeared to reflect personal outrage over that case. But his remarks also echoed a broader, longstanding concern about the Revolutionary Guards and the Basij militia [*]taking over law enforcement functions and acting beyond the knowledge of legislators.

Senior clerics have also weighed in, warning that tolerating such injustices could endanger Iran’s theocracy.

“The shameful recent events have distressed everyone and been a source of worry for all those who love their country and the Islamic republic,” said Grand Ayatollah Abdul-Karim Mousavi Ardebili, adding a plea for the government to release detainees.

The number of those killed since the election is impossible to determine, and it includes at least a few members of the Basij militia as well as protesters. One human rights group, International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, said it spoke to doctors in three Tehran hospitals who registered the bodies of 34 protesters on June 20 alone. Other doctors have provided similar accounts and have estimated a death toll of at least 150 based on corpses they saw. [that doesn’t surprise me at all] [*]

Earlier this month, family members of missing demonstrators were taken to a morgue in southwest Tehran where they reported seeing “hundreds of corpses” and were not allowed to retrieve bodies unless they certified that the deaths were of natural causes, according to accounts relayed on Web sites and to human rights workers.
Robert F. Worth reported from Dubai, and Sharon Otterman from New York.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Somalia: Civilians Flee for Yemen

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29briefs-Somalia.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | Africa
Somalia: Civilians Flee for Yemen
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Somalia] [Africa Horn] [failed states] [hence, bad news comes only out of Kenya—western media too scared to travel in Somalia] [persistent problems from piracy near horn of Africa to criminality to brutal imposition of Sharia] [the dangers of failed states] [utter anarchy] [followup] [use psci355, 455, 469b, 362] [where is the Muslim outrage at this brigands?] [how many innocent Muslims will lose their lives in their attempts to get out of the way of the fighting and strict Islamic imposition?] [*]
Thousands of Somalis fleeing fighting around the capital, Mogadishu, have massed in the northern town of Bossasso, trying to cross the Gulf of Aden and sneak into Yemen,

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29briefs-Somalia.html
July 29, 2009
World Briefing | Africa
Somalia: Civilians Flee for Yemen
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Somalia] [Africa Horn] [failed states] [hence, bad news comes only out of Kenya—western media too scared to travel in Somalia] [persistent problems from piracy near horn of Africa to criminality to brutal imposition of Sharia] [the dangers of failed states] [utter anarchy] [followup] [use psci355, 455, 469b, 362] [where is the Muslim outrage at this brigands?] [how many innocent Muslims will lose their lives in their attempts to get out of the way of the fighting and strict Islamic imposition?] [*]
Thousands of Somalis fleeing fighting around the capital, Mogadishu, have massed in the northern town of Bossasso, trying to cross the Gulf of Aden and sneak into Yemen, [*] the United Nations refugee agency said Tuesday. Up to 12,000 civilians have taken shelter in Bossasso, the base where smugglers take them to Yemen, the agency’s spokesman, Ron Redmond, said in Geneva. Thirty-thousand Somalis have made the crossing this year, but more than 300 people have died trying or are missing. [*] [1 percent?] The agency said nearly a quarter million Somalis had fled their homes since May 7, when Islamist rebels launched a concerted attack on Mogadishu. “These people are obviously reaching the end of their rope,” Mr. Redmond said. “They see no future in Somalia, and many of them are so desperate that they’re willing to risk their lives and the lives of their families to escape.” [I saw a Vanguard special on same and it was terrible] [where is the outrage?] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

From Suburban D.C. Childhood To Indictment on Terror Charges

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803193.html
From Suburban D.C. Childhood To Indictment on Terror Charges
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [global] [America born and bred] [US, white jihadis] [it’s hard not to see them as little more than misfits, miscreants, and malcontent] [but we’ll have to see as the case makes its way to court] [allegedly, these guys have traveled to AfPak for jihad against the US] [al Qaeda recruitment in US] [al Qaeda and other jihadis—global jihadi hydra] [al Qaeda in formative years?] [cross in govt] [see today’s govt for perspective from that exogenous set of inputs] [use psci469b] [unsurprisingly, a raft of neighbors have volunteered that the father and sons were the nicest, etc] [*]
Daniel Patrick Boyd, once a defensive lineman at T.C. Williams High School, is an

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/28/AR2009072803193.html
From Suburban D.C. Childhood To Indictment on Terror Charges
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Wednesday, July 29, 2009 [global] [America born and bred] [US, white jihadis] [it’s hard not to see them as little more than misfits, miscreants, and malcontent] [but we’ll have to see as the case makes its way to court] [allegedly, these guys have traveled to AfPak for jihad against the US] [al Qaeda recruitment in US] [al Qaeda and other jihadis—global jihadi hydra] [al Qaeda in formative years?] [cross in govt] [see today’s govt for perspective from that exogenous set of inputs] [use psci469b] [unsurprisingly, a raft of neighbors have volunteered that the father and sons were the nicest, etc] [*]
Daniel Patrick Boyd, once a defensive lineman at T.C. Williams High School, is an unlikely symbol of the homegrown terrorist threat.

The son of a Marine, Boyd spent his early years in the Washington suburbs living a typical American childhood. [father a Vietnam vet and son fought late in the Soviet-Afghani conflagration, I think after the Soviets had withdrawn mostly] [*] Recently, he blended with his family into a picturesque suburb of Raleigh, N.C., where he gardened and was friendly with his neighbors.

But law enforcement officials, including four SWAT teams that deployed to Boyd's home this week, point to the Muslim convert as the latest example of a radicalized American who exported jihad. Boyd, 39, is scheduled to appear in federal court in North Carolina on Thursday with his two sons and four other young men he allegedly instructed in militant techniques. [it will be interesting to follow in court] [the US once acquiesced if not mildly supported persons hustling off to fight the evil empire (Soviets)] [thus the prosecution will want to keep some of that out of court or spin it as vile—a neat trick given the Reagan administration embraced it] [*]

A federal grand jury in Raleigh has accused him of conspiring to support terrorists and kill combatants overseas, as well as making false statements to customs and FBI agents about his recent trips to the Middle East, where prosecutors say he introduced his young followers to the life of martyrdom. [I’m still not sure what the indictment was getting at with the allegations in Israel] [was the point that they were trying to hook up with Hamas or Hezbollah types?] [if latter, that puts an entirely different patina on the case other than Sunni-Salafi jihadis] [*]

Boyd is the third American citizen indicted recently on charges surrounding domestic radicalism and overseas targets. A Minnesota man pleaded guilty Tuesday to supporting terrorists in connection with a trip to Somalia to fight alongside militants. Last week, authorities unveiled a guilty plea by a Long Island native who trained in Pakistan before connecting with al-Qaeda operatives seeking to bomb European rail systems. [the convergence of the cases makes the once hard-to-imagine scenario of US 2nd generation homegrowns or conversion jihadis a bit more reasonable??] [America has been considerably better historically at integration-assimilation of immigrants than its European cousins thus such scenarios were once though low probability] [has that changed or are the cases coincidental, unrelated, and wholly unique?] [*]

Justice Department officials spoke carefully about the unfolding investigation in North Carolina, partly because at least one young man who decamped for Pakistan this year remains at large.

"This case underscores the potential threat that U.S. citizens with foreign fighter experience pose upon returning to the United States, specifically in terms of inciting other U.S.-based individuals to follow their example," [*]said David S. Kris, assistant attorney general for national security. "They return from conflict zones with combat experience, a network of contacts overseas and strong credibility with . . . recruits seeking an authority figure." [I suspect when people effectively fight mercenary campaigns, there is some risk of changed nature and inability to fit back into American polite society?] [but who knows?, hence the interest in this case as it proceeds in court] [*]

For Boyd, his arrest follows an unusual path from an Alexandria classroom to the dusty streets of Afghanistan, according to court filings and interviews with friends and neighbors.

In the 1980s, Boyd converted to Islam after being inspired by his stepfather, William Saddler, a Washington area lawyer and devout Muslim. Boyd journeyed after high school to Pakistan and Afghanistan to join Islamic resistance fighters battling the Soviet Union. [*]

In 1991, he and his brother were arrested in Peshawar, Pakistan, where Boyd spent months fighting an unusual criminal fraud case. He was convicted by an Islamic court of bank robbery and sentenced to lose his right hand and his left foot, until an appeals panel tossed out the verdict. Boyd and his wife, Sabrina, his high school sweetheart, returned to the United States, where they made a home for their three young boys in a quiet corner of North Carolina. [wow, this wasn’t in yesterday’s coverage that I remember!] [what happened?] [apparently back just after the Soviets bugged out Sharia was the law of the land in Peshawar!] [*]

Eventually, Boyd devoted himself to instructing young men that "violent jihad was a personal obligation on the part of every good Muslim," according to court papers filed in a criminal case that now threatens to send him to prison for life.

Sabrina Boyd issued a statement yesterday through the Muslim American Society in Raleigh describing hers as an "ordinary family" and asking that people not prejudge the criminal case. [*]

Daniel Boyd's mother, who lives in the Washington area, declined to comment.

The arrests of Boyd, whose beard extends to his chest, his sons Zakariya and Dylan, and four others stunned neighbors in picturesque Willow Spring, a southern suburb of Raleigh. The family lived in a home valued at $171,000, supported by a construction business that Boyd established, [*]according to state records.

"They were just normal American kids and a normal American father," said Charles Casale, 46, a neighbor who for years has shared fishing and gardening tips with the Boyds.

Daniel Boyd kept a vegetable garden and placed a "Support Our Troops" bumper sticker on his brown pickup truck. In their free time, the boys fished for largemouth bass and catfish from a small green canoe in a neighborhood pond, Casale said.

Acquaintances in North Carolina searched for clues that could explain Boyd's recent activities as they were laid out in the court documents. Two years ago, the couple's youngest son, Luqman, died after his car flipped and ejected him. Years earlier, the young family had run into financial trouble so severe that Daniel Boyd filed for bankruptcy protection.

The Boyds occasionally attended Friday prayer services at Jamaat Ibad Ar-Rahman, the largest Sunni mosque in Durham. But they broke with the mosque over Daniel Boyd's strict interpretation of Islamic law and practices, [when the American congregant breaks with the mosque because the latter is not following Salafi interpretations (putatively) of Sharia, the fellow has gone beyond the pale?] [*] according to friends and members of the congregation.

Ultimately, the family held prayer services in their home on a cul de sac on Lakeside Circle. Still, Hisham Heda, the chairman of the board at the mosque, said that "in our dealings with Mr. Boyd and his family, we found them to be people of good moral character."

Zuhair Osman, 23, another board member, who is close friends with the woman Dylan Boyd married at the mosque last year, said the younger Boyd is a very nice, highly respected young man who never drank, smoke or partied, "but at the same time, he was a little more strict and religious." [I’m guessing we’re going to hear more anecdotes along those lines] [*] Dylan Boyd sometimes debated friends about his view that devout Muslims should not be photographed or allow their pictures to be posted on the Internet, Osman said, adding that he was speaking personally and not representing the mosque.

Osman added that Daniel Boyd, whom he knew as Saifullah, or "sword of God," had dealt with the FBI for five years, discussing his militant activities in the 1980s but saying he was no longer interested in politics. The FBI "did come to him with pictures of terrorists killed in Afghanistan, and he did recognize some of them. [*]They had worked together and established relationships," Osman said. "He was very aware that he was being watched [by the FBI] in everything he did. . . . He was never afraid." [this is getting curiouser and curiouser!] [the FBI had worked with him for some time, it appears] [what did he do to piss them off and cause a break in the relationship that would result in the FBI and state attorney’s offices to begin compiling dossier and his alleged crimes??] [I can hardly wait to hear] [*]

A Joint Terrorism Task Force had been tracking Boyd at least since 2006, monitoring his e-mail and phone calls, according to conversations cited in the indictment. Authorities were interested in Boyd's growing stockpile of armor-piercing assault weapons and his rural training expeditions on the Virginia border with young Muslim men, as well as the networks he used to finance and plan trips overseas. [as I recall the indictment made a clear time delineation of 2006 to present in which alleged criminal activity occurred] [all the previous stuff was insufficiently problematic, by which we now see that’s largely due to the simbiotoic relationship between this fellow and the government (mostly FBI apparently)] [*]

Officials sprang into action Monday after learning that Boyd, his two sons and his wife might be planning a move this year to Jordan, where at least some followers had visited in recent years, according to two sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation continues. [I find that a little difficult to believe] [he’d have to speak Arabic relatively well (and his wife and kids) in order to assimilate into Jordanian society and it would have been a substantial investment in time and leaving behind his property, etc] [it just doesn’t quite pass the smell test] [*]
Staff researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Pakistani Scientist Is Found Fit to Stand Trial

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/pakistani-scientist-is-found-fit-to-stand-trial/
City Room - Blogging From the Five Boroughs
July 29, 2009, 11:25 am
Pakistani Scientist Is Found Fit to Stand Trial
By Benjamin Weiser
Aafia Siddiqui Aafia Siddiqui [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [she and son?, attempted to attack a US base or outpost of some sort] [there were strange circumstances as I recall (she had disappeared for many months and it seemed that the US or Paksitan or somebody else had held her but then somehow lost the two?)] [use psci469b] [ditto] [*]
Aafia Siddiqui, the Pakistani neuroscientist accused of trying to kill American soldiers and F.B.I. agents in Afghanistan, has been found competent to stand trial by a federal judge in Manhattan. [it’s unclear what facility she’s being held in but it appears to be normal federal brig? and not some military deal] [*]

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/pakistani-scientist-is-found-fit-to-stand-trial/
City Room - Blogging From the Five Boroughs
July 29, 2009, 11:25 am
Pakistani Scientist Is Found Fit to Stand Trial
By Benjamin Weiser
Aafia Siddiqui Aafia Siddiqui [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [this US-trained scientist was picked up in Afghanistan some several months ago] [followup] [she and son?, attempted to attack a US base or outpost of some sort] [there were strange circumstances as I recall (she had disappeared for many months and it seemed that the US or Paksitan or somebody else had held her but then somehow lost the two?)] [use psci469b] [ditto] [*]
Aafia Siddiqui, the Pakistani neuroscientist accused of trying to kill American soldiers and F.B.I. agents in Afghanistan, has been found competent to stand trial by a federal judge in Manhattan. [it’s unclear what facility she’s being held in but it appears to be normal federal brig? and not some military deal] [*]

The judge, Richard M. Berman of United States District Court, said in a 36-page decision on Wednesday that Ms. Siddiqui “had a rational as well as a factual understanding of the proceedings against her” and could assist her lawyers with her defense. He set a trial date for Oct. 19. [remember this date and to watch for info on the trial] [it will be interesting to look for indicators of where she was held-dissapeard for a time?] [*]

In a previous hearing this month, psychological experts offered conflicting testimony on whether Ms. Siddiqui was faking symptoms of mental illness – as prosecutors maintained — or had a genuine mental disorder, [naturally that’s what her lawyer is supposed to do][*] as her lawyer argued.

Ms. Siddiqui, 37, repeatedly interrupted the competency hearing with a series of disjointed outbursts, denying that she had shot anyone and declaring at one point: “I want to make peace with the United States of America. I’m not an enemy. I never was.” [*]

Ms. Siddiqui was taken into custody in Afghanistan last summer after she was found loitering with suspicious items in her handbag, the authorities have said. These included handwritten notes that referred to a “mass casualty attack,” and listed landmarks like the Empire State Building and the Statue of Liberty, [well she would have had to get from AfPak back to the US in order to effect said attacks and she didn’t seem to have much of a plan to do so when she was grabbe] [but where had she been previously??] [*]according to a federal indictment.

The indictment charges that while she was being held, she picked up an unsecured rifle, and fired at least two shots toward a member of an American team of F.B.I. agents and military personnel who were about to question her. [*]No one was hit. She was charged with attempted murder and other charges, and has pleaded not guilty.
Her lawyer could not immediately be reached for comment. Yusill Scribner, a spokeswoman for the United States attorney’s office, had no comment.

Police Officer Found Dead in Swat Valley of Pakistan

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29pakistan.html
July 29, 2009
Police Officer Found Dead in Swat Valley of Pakistan
By PIR ZUBAIR SHAH [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pakistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The beheaded body of a police constable who was kidnapped last week in the Swat Valley was found Tuesday morning near the town of Mingora, [*] [gee, that’s the calling card of only one class of persons: jihadis whether

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29pakistan.html
July 29, 2009
Police Officer Found Dead in Swat Valley of Pakistan
By PIR ZUBAIR SHAH [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pakistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The beheaded body of a police constable who was kidnapped last week in the Swat Valley was found Tuesday morning near the town of Mingora, [*] [gee, that’s the calling card of only one class of persons: jihadis whether local or global] [*] the police said.

A police official in Swat said the killing of the constable, Jehan Zada, amounted to a “continuation of the same process,” implying that the police believed that the Taliban were to blame. [*]

Police officers have become prime targets of Taliban assassins in Swat, and the abduction and killing of the constable underscores the continuing pressure on the police there. Mr. Zada was taken from his house in the Sangota area of the valley, [*]the police said.

His killing also seems to demonstrate the Taliban’s reach and ability in the Swat Valley despite the presence of more than 20,000 Pakistani soldiers sent there to flush out the militants. [which is the more important less the Taliban broadcast to the people] [namely, our reach has not been limited by the police so don’t think you can ignore us] [*]

The police have also discovered the bodies of a number of civilians beheaded by the Taliban in recent weeks, according to a senior police official in Peshawar who spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing departmental policy. He said the civilians were suspected by the Taliban of being informants for the military. [display number 1] [*]

Taliban attacks on the police in Swat have led to more than 800 desertions by officers over the last two years. Police officials have been unable to prevent suicide bombings, beheadings and other tactics used by Taliban fighters. [and that’s the important thing the Talibs are stressing] [*]

The constable was killed as hundreds of thousands of displaced people were making their way back to the Swat Valley, [*] ordered by the authorities to return to their homes there after months of fighting between insurgents and government forces.

The army continues to battle the Taliban in several insurgent strongholds, particularly in the Matta and Kabal regions of Swat, not far from Mingora, the main city, where many refugees have reclaimed their homes. In a sign that Mingora was still not secure, the Pakistani military declined a request last week by the American envoy Richard C. Holbrooke to visit the town. [*]

The Taliban have razed houses and killed a civilian working for the police in Matta. And now, with the beheading in Mingora, some counterinsurgency experts say they fear that the returning refugees may have been sent back too soon. [if so, what a majopr cockup by the police] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

July 28, 2009

Crime Rate of Veterans in Colo. Unit Cited

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702331.html
Crime Rate of Veterans in Colo. Unit Cited
Soldiers Tell Newspaper of Sharp Rise in Violent Incidents After Iraq Deployments
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama white house] [bureaucracy] [defense department and others] [the strange characteristics of soldiers who were trained and deployed from Fort Carson, CO!] ] [11th congress, 1st session] [*]
Soldiers returning from Iraq after serving with a Fort Carson, Colo., combat brigade have exhibited an exceptionally high rate of criminal behavior in their home towns, carrying out a string of killings and other offenses that the ex-soldiers attribute to lax discipline and episodes of indiscriminate killing during their grueling deployment, [it’s got to be something about the leadership at the top of the brigade!] [*] according to a six-month investigation by the Colorado Springs Gazette newspaper.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702331.html
Crime Rate of Veterans in Colo. Unit Cited
Soldiers Tell Newspaper of Sharp Rise in Violent Incidents After Iraq Deployments
By R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama white house] [bureaucracy] [defense department and others] [the strange characteristics of soldiers who were trained and deployed from Fort Carson, CO!] ] [11th congress, 1st session] [*]
Soldiers returning from Iraq after serving with a Fort Carson, Colo., combat brigade have exhibited an exceptionally high rate of criminal behavior in their home towns, carrying out a string of killings and other offenses that the ex-soldiers attribute to lax discipline and episodes of indiscriminate killing during their grueling deployment, [it’s got to be something about the leadership at the top of the brigade!] [*] according to a six-month investigation by the Colorado Springs Gazette newspaper.

Members of the 3,500-soldier Fourth Infantry Division's Fourth Brigade told the publication that the brutal conditions in Iraq from 2004 to 2007 and the Army's failure to provide proper treatment for stress were in part to blame for the incidents of rape, domestic abuse, shootings, stabbings, kidnappings and suicides, [*]the paper said.

Ten of the brigade's members committed or attempted to commit homicides after their return from Iraq, a rate said to be 114 times the murder rate in Colorado Springs, adjacent to the unit's base.

During their deployment, some soldiers killed civilians at random -- in some cases at point-blank range -- used banned stun guns on captives, pushed people off bridges, loaded weapons with illegal hollow-point bullets, abused drugs and occasionally mutilated the bodies of Iraqis, [god heavens] [*] according to accounts the Gazette attributed to soldiers who said they witnessed the events. The unit's casualty rate was double the average for Army combat teams deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, the paper said.

In December 2007, a member of the brigade wrote senior Army officials about what he described as "war crimes" committed by the unit, including the shootings and dismemberment of a 16-year-old boy and several civilians.

The Army told the newspaper its investigators found no evidence to sustain some of these allegations. Several soldiers involved in improper conduct were dishonorably discharged.

The Army has taken a special interest in the unit's troublesome track record, [I should hope so] [*] commissioning a task force that examined eight of the homicides committed after soldiers returned home. It affirmed in a 126-page report this month that "combat exposure/intensity, leadership, and barriers to seeking care" may have increased the risks of "negative outcomes" for ex-soldiers.

Maj. Steve Wollman, who was recently appointed as a spokesman for Fort Carson, said Monday he couldn't "speak to the past, but in the present and future, we are working very hard to provide the best behavioral health for our soldiers and their families." He said efforts were being made to overcome the stigma attached to applying for mental health treatment, a key problem cited in the Army's task force report.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Military Criticized in Report on Soldier Electrocuted in Iraq

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/middleeast/28iraq.html
July 28, 2009
Military Criticized in Report on Soldier Electrocuted in Iraq
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] bush white house residual] [bureaucracy] [defense department and others] [privatization of USFP over the past 8 years—actually longer] [it has seemed especially pronounced in Bush terms as Cheney’s old company has made a fortune off the wars, especially –ir] [110th congress, 2nd session; 111th congress, 1st session] [followup last year] [*]
WASHINGTON (AP) — Military leaders and a major military contractor failed to protect a Green Beret who was electrocuted while showering in his barracks in Iraq, the Defense Department’s inspector general has determined in findings released Monday.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/middleeast/28iraq.html
July 28, 2009
Military Criticized in Report on Soldier Electrocuted in Iraq
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] bush white house residual] [bureaucracy] [defense department and others] [privatization of USFP over the past 8 years—actually longer] [it has seemed especially pronounced in Bush terms as Cheney’s old company has made a fortune off the wars, especially –ir] [110th congress, 2nd session; 111th congress, 1st session] [followup last year] [*]
WASHINGTON (AP) — Military leaders and a major military contractor failed to protect a Green Beret who was electrocuted while showering in his barracks in Iraq, the Defense Department’s inspector general has determined in findings released Monday.

The death of the Green Beret, Staff Sgt. Ryan D. Maseth, in early 2008 set off an investigation that included a review of 17 other electrocution deaths in Iraq. The case also led to inspections of the electrical systems of about 90,000 facilities maintained by the United States in Iraq.

The inspector general said in the findings that “multiple systems and organizations” failed and exposed Sergeant Maseth to “unacceptable risk.”

The report said that Sergeant Maseth, 24, was electrocuted while showering when he came in contact with water pipes that had become energized because of the failure of a water pump that had not been grounded. It says that the military contractor KBR, based in Houston, installed the pump and adjacent water tanks.

KBR did not ground equipment during installation or report improperly grounded equipment during routine maintenance, the inspector general said. It also says that KBR did not have standard operating procedures for the technical inspection of facilities.

But it also says military commanders and important decision makers failed to ensure that renovations were properly performed and did not address the maintenance issue.

Heather Browne, a KBR spokeswoman, said the company had not seen the report and would not comment on the contents. But she said in an e-mail message that while Sergeant Maseth’s death was tragic, the company maintains that it is not responsible. She said that KBR informed the military of the absence of grounding and bonding in the structure nine months before Sergeant Maseth’s death.

“Prior to that incident, the military never directed KBR to repair, upgrade or improve the grounding system in the building in which Maseth resided, nor was KBR directed to perform any preventative maintenance at this facility,” Ms. Browne said.

Sergeant Maseth’s family has filed a lawsuit against KBR. Cheryl Harris, his mother, said in a statement she read over the telephone that she was pleased that the inspector general had conducted the investigation.
“The results are revealing and contrary to what KBR and its president have continuously stated,” her statement said.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Congressional Committees Raise Concerns Over Pentagon's Strategic Communications

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701896.html
Congressional Committees Raise Concerns Over Pentagon's Strategic Communications
By Walter Pincus
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 Obama white houe] [bush white house] [NSC principals] [bureaucratic] [dod, pentagon] [how key national-secureity bureaucracies have run public diplomacy campaigns against the American people] [of ocurse the use propaganda and certain elements of the media are their conduits at times] [to do so, they have to be critical of things from time to time but watch what they criticize and what they never criticize] [use nsc] [use psci 455] [see May 6, and before that April 16] [*]
Lawmakers are voicing concerns about the Pentagon's strategic communications programs, through which the military aims to win over civilians and erode support for adversaries in countries around the world.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701896.html
Congressional Committees Raise Concerns Over Pentagon's Strategic Communications
By Walter Pincus
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 Obama white houe] [bush white house] [NSC principals] [bureaucratic] [dod, pentagon] [how key national-secureity bureaucracies have run public diplomacy campaigns against the American people] [of ocurse the use propaganda and certain elements of the media are their conduits at times] [to do so, they have to be critical of things from time to time but watch what they criticize and what they never criticize] [use nsc] [use psci 455] [see May 6, and before that April 16] [*]
Lawmakers are voicing concerns about the Pentagon's strategic communications programs, through which the military aims to win over civilians and erode support for adversaries in countries around the world.

The programs have grown too fast and are spread through the Defense Department budget in a way that hampers oversight, complain the House and Senate Armed Services committees and the House Appropriations Committee. They also suggest that the military is producing propaganda and other materials that mask U.S. government sponsorship and focus "far beyond a traditional military information operations." [where’s SecDef Gates?] [I want to hear what he thinks] [*]

In Iraq, the military has awarded $100 million contracts to support elections and the aims of the Baghdad government. A recent multimillion-dollar contract in Afghanistan tried to bolster public support for the Kabul government's efforts in its fight against makeshift bombs.

The Pentagon spends nearly $1 billion a year on its strategic communications, [let’s call it what it is: propoganda] [*]its contribution to the "war of ideas" that until recent years had been the sole province of the State Department's public diplomacy effort. The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have resulted in the military getting money more easily than the diplomatic corps, and the dominance of military personnel in those countries has led to an increasing military role in information operations.

State Department special envoy Richard C. Holbrooke told journalists in March that "the information issue -- sometimes called psychological operations or strategic communications" -- has become a "major, major gap to be filled" before U.S.-led forces can regain the upper hand in Afghanistan. [*]

Last week, the House Appropriations Committee, in approving the fiscal 2010 defense funding bill, said that it had identified 10 strategic communications programs that had grown from $9 million in fiscal 2005 to a "staggering $988 million request for fiscal 2010." The committee said many of the costlier programs appear as "alarmingly non-military propaganda, public relations, and behavioral modification messaging."

Several of the 10 classified programs "should be terminated immediately," said the panel, and it threatened to withhold funding for all 10 for next year until Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates reports to the committee about their "target audiences, goals, and measures of effectiveness." It also cut $500 million from the Pentagon's overall total for strategic communications. [*]

The Senate Armed Services Committee, meanwhile, directed the Pentagon last week to come up with separate budget materials for fiscal 2011 "that clearly articulate and document Defense Department objectives and funding levels for strategic communications and public diplomacy." Without such documentation, the Senate panel said, it could not "oversee adequately the funding for the multitude of programs."

The first congressional panel to voice public criticism of the military's programs was the House Armed Services Committee. It said last month that the Pentagon's "planning" for strategic communications "is insufficient compared to the needs," and it directed Gates to report within four months on the department's "strategic communications workforce." Gates's report is to include the skills needed, both military and civilian personnel on hand who are capable, and the number of contractors being used to fill any gaps. [*]

Despite their criticisms, each committee sees merit in the programs. Senate Armed Services described strategic communications as "important" but said it was "not able to determine whether these efforts are integrated within the Defense Department or with the broader U.S. Government, nor is the committee able to oversee adequately the funding for the multitude of programs." The committee nonetheless urged Special Operations Command to use its "linguistic and cultural expertise" to increase its strategic communications activities linked to military operations.

The House Armed Services Committee said "online strategic communications," such as Web sites now run by the Defense Department in the Balkans and North Africa, "are essential tools for the department to effectively counter the violent extremist groups abroad." [good; they should be nervous about such violations] [*] It described the Pentagon as "overly cautious" in its approach, for fear of violating the law that prohibits films and articles produced by the State Department from being circulated in the United States.

The committee said the Pentagon should conduct a new legal review of that law, which it said applies only to the State Department, and expand its online media operations even if they can be accessed in the United States by American audiences.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

'Smart Grid' Raises Security Concerns

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702988.html
'Smart Grid' Raises Security Concerns
By Brian Krebs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [relatively recent spate of opeds and other pieces geared toward America’s future cyber attacks] [not surprisingly, DoD has moved ahead with a new Cyber-Defense Command] [note: DoD is where the NSA exists already so that it has dual loyalties of sorts: it’s part of the broad-based intelligence community (IC) with a chain of command to the DNI-ODNI as well as part of the DoD with a chain of command through the SecDef to the NSC] [both DNI and SecDef are NSC principals] [followup, July 23] [*]
Electric utilities vying for $3.9 billion in new federal "smart grid" grants will need to prove that they are taking steps to prevent cyberattacks as they move to link nearly all elements of the U.S. power grid to the public Internet.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702988.html
'Smart Grid' Raises Security Concerns
By Brian Krebs
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [111th congress, 1st session] [relatively recent spate of opeds and other pieces geared toward America’s future cyber attacks] [not surprisingly, DoD has moved ahead with a new Cyber-Defense Command] [note: DoD is where the NSA exists already so that it has dual loyalties of sorts: it’s part of the broad-based intelligence community (IC) with a chain of command to the DNI-ODNI as well as part of the DoD with a chain of command through the SecDef to the NSC] [both DNI and SecDef are NSC principals] [followup, July 23] [*]
Electric utilities vying for $3.9 billion in new federal "smart grid" grants will need to prove that they are taking steps to prevent cyberattacks as they move to link nearly all elements of the U.S. power grid to the public Internet.

The requirements from the Energy Department come amid mounting concern from security experts that many existing smart-grid efforts do not have sufficient built-in protections against computer hacking, such as new "smart meters" that put information about consumers' power use onto the Internet, grid-management software and other equipment.

The smart-grid spending in the federal stimulus package is intended to create jobs and improve the efficiency and reliability of the electricity grid by lowering peak demand, reducing energy consumption, integrating more renewable energy sources and easing the pressure to build new coal-fired power plants. [*]

Many of those efficiency gains will be made possible by new technology being built on top of the existing power grid, such as smart meters, which provide real-time feedback on power consumption patterns and levels. An estimated 8 million smart meters are used in the United States today, and more than 50 million more could be installed in at least two dozen states over the next five years, according to the Edison Foundation's Institute for Electric Efficiency.

Yet security researchers have found that these devices often are the weakest link in the smart-grid chain. Smart meters give consumers direct access to information about their power usage and the ability to manage that usage over the Web, but that two-way communication also opens up the possibility that the grid could be attacked from the outside. Many such systems require little authentication to carry out key functions, such as disconnecting customers from the power grid. [well then develop encryption] [*]

Indeed, at this week's Black Hat, the world's largest cybersecurity conference held annually in Las Vegas, researchers from IOActive of Seattle are slated to demonstrate a computer worm that spreads by taking advantage of the software update feature built into a prevalent brand of smart meters (IOActive is not disclosing which). The worm could in theory give the attackers who launched it the ability to very quickly sever tens of thousands of homes from the smart grid.

Joshua J. Pennell, IOActive president and chief executive, said he hopes the presentation will serve as a wake-up call for smart-grid technology vendors and the companies purchasing the products.

Federal grants for smaller smart-grid projects range from $300,000 to $20 million, while the federal share of funds for larger projects could be as much as $200 million. The Energy Department says it can reject any grant application that does not demonstrate that ensuring cybersecurity will be a top priority.

"We haven't described how to address the requirements, because we're trying to leave the door to innovation open," said Hank Kenchington, a senior manager with the Energy Department's Office of Electric Delivery and Energy Reliability. "But we do say -- even if an award scored 'A' grades on all aspects but doesn't address cyber -- we reserve right to not go forward with that grant. We realize you need to ask for the security up front and have it built-in up front, or you're going to end up paying for it later." [hell yes] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Obama Opens Policy Talks With China

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/28strategy.html
July 28, 2009
Obama Opens Policy Talks With China
By MARK LANDLER obama white house] [Obama foreign policy generally] [America’s long, sometimes agonizing balance of Sino-US relations] [NSC, political shop, and bureaucracy] [China fairly authoritatian regime and competing demands of normalized relations and trade verus American policy toward Taiwan] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
WASHINGTON — The United States and China inaugurated two days of high-level talks on Monday, exchanging promises of great-power cooperation on weighty issues like climate change while steering clear of potential conflicts over exchange rates and human rights.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/28strategy.html
July 28, 2009
Obama Opens Policy Talks With China
By MARK LANDLER obama white house] [Obama foreign policy generally] [America’s long, sometimes agonizing balance of Sino-US relations] [NSC, political shop, and bureaucracy] [China fairly authoritatian regime and competing demands of normalized relations and trade verus American policy toward Taiwan] [followup] [use psci355] [*]
WASHINGTON — The United States and China inaugurated two days of high-level talks on Monday, exchanging promises of great-power cooperation on weighty issues like climate change while steering clear of potential conflicts over exchange rates and human rights.

President Obama, saying that ties between the countries are as “important as any bilateral relationship in the world,” welcomed senior Chinese leaders to the meetings here, which were jointly led by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner.

“I have no illusions that the United States and China will agree on every issue, nor choose to see the world in the same way,” Mr. Obama said. “But that only makes dialogue more important.”

Ticking off a long list of priorities, the president said the two countries would seek ways to work together on economic recovery, climate change, clean-energy technology, nuclear nonproliferation, counterterrorism and humanitarian disasters like the one in Darfur, Sudan.

Analysts said the United States seemed eager to play down areas of friction like China’s currency policy, in part because the Obama administration does not want to antagonize Beijing, its largest foreign creditor, when Washington is running a yawning deficit.

“This is not an issue that the administration is banging the table on,” said Myron Brilliant, senior vice president for international affairs at the United States Chamber of Commerce.

The meetings, called the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, are a successor to a wide-ranging consultation begun during the Bush administration by Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. Mrs. Clinton pushed for the State Department to take an equal role in the talks, previously weighted toward economic issues.

By broadening the scope, China and the United States were able to forge common cause on issues like North Korea. Mrs. Clinton praised the Chinese government last week for doing more to support American efforts to pressure Pyongyang.

“At this point, the relationship is basically in good shape,” said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, who worked on China policy in the Clinton White House. “But I don’t think anyone can assume things will remain in good shape, given the difficulty of the issues.”

Mr. Obama referred frankly to tensions over human rights, saying that the United States believes the “that all peoples should be free to speak their minds — and that includes ethnic and religious minorities in China.”

But he expressed respect for what he called an “ancient and dynamic” society, and noted that he had named two Chinese-Americans to his cabinet: Steven Chu, the energy secretary, and Gary Locke, the commerce secretary. Mr. Chu later made a presentation on climate change.

The Chinese delegation was led by Wang Qishan, a vice premier who oversees economic policy, and Dai Bingguo, a state councilor responsible for foreign policy. Mr. Dai said the upheaval of the recent economic crisis had united the two countries. “We’re actually in the same big boat that has been hit by fierce wind and huge waves,” he said.

While there are nascent signs of recovery in both countries, Mr. Obama stressed the need for Americans to save more and for Chinese consumers to spend more. The Americans told the Chinese they would have to adjust to higher household savings in the United States, said David Loevinger, the Treasury’s senior coordinator for the meetings.

Mr. Loevinger said American officials did broach the issue of China’s exchange rate, which Beijing deliberately keeps depressed to bolster its exports. But he declined to characterize the exchange.

Arvind Subramanian, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said, “The currency issue is going to remain important because of the need to get to ‘balanced growth.’ ”

Some of the more contentious issues may be taken up on Tuesday. For example, the United States had yet to register its dissatisfaction with government procurement rules in China that favor Chinese manufacturers.
“Let’s be honest,” Mr. Obama said, “some in China think that America will try to contain China’s ambitions; some in America that think there is something to fear in a rising China. I take a different view.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Virginia: Qaeda-Trained American Sentenced to Life

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/us/28brfs-QAEDATRAINED_BRF.html
July 28, 2009
National Briefing | South
Virginia: Qaeda-Trained American Sentenced to Life
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [previously sentence and now?] [ditto] [*]
An American who became a terrorist with Al Qaeda while attending college in Saudi

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/us/28brfs-QAEDATRAINED_BRF.html
July 28, 2009
National Briefing | South
Virginia: Qaeda-Trained American Sentenced to Life
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [previously sentence and now?] [ditto] [*]
An American who became a terrorist with Al Qaeda while attending college in Saudi Arabia and plotted to assassinate President George W. Bush was sentenced to life in prison. An appeals court had overturned the original 30-year sentence for the man, Ahmed Omar Abu Ali, 28, who was born in Houston and grew up in the Washington suburb of Falls Church. He was convicted in 2005 of joining Al Qaeda while studying in Saudi Arabia in 2002. Mr. Abu Ali met with top Qaeda leaders in Saudi Arabia and discussed establishing a sleeper cell in the United States. Last year, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in Richmond, ordered a new sentencing hearing, saying the original sentence was too lenient. Mr. Abu Ali, who was sentenced in Alexandria, has been in solitary confinement at a federal prison in Florence, Colo.[*] He repeated claims that he was tortured by Saudi authorities into giving a confession.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Falls Church Man's Sentence in Terror Plot Is Increased to Life

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701384.html
Falls Church Man's Sentence in Terror Plot Is Increased to Life
By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [previously sentence and now?] [*]
A Falls Church man convicted of plotting with al-Qaeda to kill President George W. Bush was resentenced to life in prison Monday after the judge said his release would threaten "the safety of the American citizenry."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701384.html
Falls Church Man's Sentence in Terror Plot Is Increased to Life
By Jerry Markon
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad] [previously sentence and now?] [*]
A Falls Church man convicted of plotting with al-Qaeda to kill President George W. Bush was resentenced to life in prison Monday after the judge said his release would threaten "the safety of the American citizenry."

Ahmed Omar Abu Ali had been given a 30-year prison term after he was convicted in 2005 of joining an al-Qaeda conspiracy to mount a series of Sept. 11-style attacks and assassinations in the United States. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit upheld the conviction last year but sent the case back for resentencing, indicating that the sentence should be more severe. [*]

U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee obliged on Monday, saying he had reevaluated the case and concluded that the danger of ever releasing Abu Ali is too great. "I cannot put the safety of the American citizenry at risk," he said, citing Abu Ali's "unwillingness to renounce the beliefs that led to his terrorist activities." [*]

The resentencing in U.S. District Court in Alexandria marked an apparent end to one of the most emotional and highest-profile terrorism cases since the Sept, 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon. Prosecutors portrayed Abu Ali, who was valedictorian of his 1999 class at the Islamic Saudi Academy in Fairfax County, as an example of the threat of homegrown terrorism.

His trial was the first in a U.S. criminal court to rely heavily on evidence gathered by a foreign intelligence service. Security officers from Saudi Arabia, where Abu Ali was jailed for 20 months, provided the bulk of the government's case, testifying via video from the kingdom.

Abu Ali's family, which mounted a highly public campaign for his return to this country, said that he was tortured by Saudi security officers and that U.S. officials were complicit -- allegations that have gained resonance in recent years because of the fierce debate over the Bush administration's treatment of detainees.

But the judge, jury and appellate court rejected that argument. A juror said after the trial that Abu Ali's videotaped confession was "chilling" and showed no sign of coercion.

Before the judge imposed the tougher sentence Monday, Abu Ali said he was being mistreated at the highly secure federal prison in Colorado known as the "supermax," and he blamed "a rogue Justice Department" for his conviction.

"I cannot pretend that this is justice," said Abu Ali, who said he wanted to "remind" the judge "that one day you will go before the divine tribunal. Allah, he knows the doings of every soul. If you are comfortable with that, then you can decree whatever you want to decree."

As he left the courtroom, Abu Ali smiled and waved to a large crowd of supporters, some of whom called out in Arabic "Salaam aleikum," or "Peace be with you." Abu Ali's parents declined to comment.

His attorney, Joshua Dratel, said in an interview that the life term was "unfortunate" and that the original sentence was reasonable. "What they are really doing is setting a mandatory minimum term of life in prison for terrorism cases," said Dratel, who had urged Lee to resentence Abu Ali to no more than 30 years. "That's contrary to what the law is."

Prosecutors asked the judge to impose life. "This defendant planned acts of terrorism that were designed to inflict massive casualties on innocent civilians within the United States," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen M. Campbell. [*]

David H. Laufman, who prosecuted the case and is now a Washington defense lawyer, attributed the sentence in part to "Abu Ali's refusal to express even a scintilla of remorse for his conduct," and he said the case "underscores the ability of federal courts to resolve the most complex legal issues" in terrorism matters. [*]

For years, U.S. officials have been debating whether to bring such cases before the criminal justice system or to military tribunals. The 4th Circuit judges who reviewed Abu Ali's conviction indicated they thought some terrorism cases should remain in the federal courts.

The prosecution of Abu Ali was among a series of major terrorism cases in the Alexandria federal court after Sept. 11. Jurors convicted Abu Ali, then 24, on all nine counts, including conspiracy to assassinate the president. Prosecutors said Abu Ali had taken credit for originating the plot against Bush, which had not advanced beyond the talking stage. [*]

They said the plot included crashing airplanes, killing members of Congress, and bombing nightclubs and public gatherings.

Saudi security officers arrested Abu Ali in 2003 on suspicion that he was connected to a bombing that killed 23 people in that country. His incarceration triggered a flurry of legal and diplomatic activity, with Abu Ali's parents insisting that he be returned to the United States.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

North Carolina: 7 Are Charged in Terror Conspiracy

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/us/28brfs-7ARECHARGEDI_BRF.html
July 28, 2009
National Briefing | South
North Carolina: 7 Are Charged in Terror Conspiracy
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*] [see today’s external, top, for piece and various external stimuli involved in case] [*]
A North Carolina man trained in Pakistan and Afghanistan has been charged along with six men he is accused of recruiting with conspiring to support terrorism and traveling

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/us/28brfs-7ARECHARGEDI_BRF.html
July 28, 2009
National Briefing | South
North Carolina: 7 Are Charged in Terror Conspiracy
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*] [see today’s external, top, for piece and various external stimuli involved in case] [*]
A North Carolina man trained in Pakistan and Afghanistan has been charged along with six men he is accused of recruiting with conspiring to support terrorism and traveling overseas to participate in “violent jihad,” according to an indictment. The man, Daniel P. Boyd, 39, and the six other men were arrested and made their first court appearances in Raleigh, charged with providing material support to terrorism. The indictment said Mr. Boyd, a United States citizen, trained in Afghanistan and fought there between 1989 and 1992 against the Soviet Union before returning to the United States. Two of the suspects are Mr. Boyd’s sons, Zakariya Boyd, 20, and Dylan Boyd, 22. The others are Anes Subasic, 33; Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan, 22; and Ziyad Yaghi, 21. Hysen Sherifi, 24, a native of Kosovo and a legal permanent resident of the United States, was also charged; he was the only person arrested who was not an American citizen.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703021.html
Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*]
Federal prosecutors in North Carolina accused six U.S. citizens and a permanent resident Monday of conspiring to provide material support to foreign terrorists and to commit murder overseas. The charges come as part of a long-running investigation into

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703021.html
Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*]
Federal prosecutors in North Carolina accused six U.S. citizens and a permanent resident Monday of conspiring to provide material support to foreign terrorists and to commit murder overseas. The charges come as part of a long-running investigation into Raleigh area men who stockpiled a cache of assault weapons.

At the center of the ring is Daniel P. Boyd, 39, who trained in terrorist camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan in the 1980s before fighting the Soviet Union, authorities said. Boyd, a Muslim convert, returned home and three years ago allegedly began recruiting a group of men to wage jihad.

Also known as "Saifullah," or sword of God, Boyd raised money to send his acolytes on a visit to the Middle East, according to an indictment handed up by a grand jury last week and unsealed Monday.

Authorities picked up no sign of communications between Boyd and al-Qaeda or any plans by the Raleigh group to wreak havoc, according to a law enforcement source who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation continues. But the weapons that the group had allegedly amassed and brandished in training exercises in North Carolina this June and July gave pause to federal officials, the source added.

The firearms mentioned in the indictment include several semiautomatic weapons, including an AK-47 assault rifle and carbines modeled after the military's M14 and M16. [*]

Several of the defendants traveled to the Gaza Strip, Jordan and Israel in 2006 and 2007, as conflict in the region escalated, the indictment said. Israeli forces and Palestinian militants waged a series of battles in Gaza in the summer of 2006, and Israel briefly invaded Lebanon in July 2006 after rocket attacks by Hezbollah militants. But most defendants appear to have been turned away from the fighting and did not inflict casualties, according to court papers.

"These charges hammer home the point that terrorists and their supporters are not confined to the remote regions of some faraway land but can grow and fester right here at home," [*] [they guys were at it so long and almost surely came on the federale radar screen back in 1991, when Soviets had left Afhanistan and former Yugoslavia was ready to collapse] [*] said U.S. Attorney George E.B. Holding.

The charges come less than a week after prosecutors in Brooklyn accused a U.S. citizen from New York of traveling to Pakistan for terrorist training and of providing intelligence to al-Qaeda operatives about the Long Island Rail Road.

Boyd is also charged with lying to customs and FBI agents two years ago about the purpose of his visit to Israel. The indictment mentions conversations between Boyd and another defendant who shared his views, and e-mail messages that Boyd sent to a third defendant that "extolled the virtues" of dying a martyr.

Members of the group "radicalized" younger converts to believe that "violent jihad was a personal obligation on the part of every good Muslim," the indictment said. The defendants, who include Boyd's sons Zakariya and Dylan, could all face life imprisonment if convicted. [in Salafi Sunni Islam, it is a personal obligation of all able-bodied men] [the fatah or conquest from about 639 until nearly 729 CE was a series of offensive and defensive jihadis] [and as each new people was broght under the banner that obligation extended to them] [*]
The name of at least one other defendant appeared to be redacted in the indictment. A search is ongoing, another government official said.
© 2009 The Washington Post Compan

Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703021.html
Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*]
Federal prosecutors in North Carolina accused six U.S. citizens and a permanent resident Monday of conspiring to provide material support to foreign terrorists and to commit murder overseas. The charges come as part of a long-running investigation into

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703021.html
Seven Face Terrorism Charges in N.C.
By Carrie Johnson and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Obama White House] [residual from Presidents Bush and predecessors] [NSC to lowly bureaucracy] [from kinetic military force to diplomacy to economic suasion and everything along the continuum] [recruitment and attraction of American jihadis] [in the deep south!?] [see today’s external where the NYTs’ Lede blog archived on same] [use psci355, 469b] [global-jihadis hydra in American and abroad][*]
Federal prosecutors in North Carolina accused six U.S. citizens and a permanent resident Monday of conspiring to provide material support to foreign terrorists and to commit murder overseas. The charges come as part of a long-running investigation into Raleigh area men who stockpiled a cache of assault weapons.

At the center of the ring is Daniel P. Boyd, 39, who trained in terrorist camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan in the 1980s before fighting the Soviet Union, authorities said. Boyd, a Muslim convert, returned home and three years ago allegedly began recruiting a group of men to wage jihad.

Also known as "Saifullah," or sword of God, Boyd raised money to send his acolytes on a visit to the Middle East, according to an indictment handed up by a grand jury last week and unsealed Monday.

Authorities picked up no sign of communications between Boyd and al-Qaeda or any plans by the Raleigh group to wreak havoc, according to a law enforcement source who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the investigation continues. But the weapons that the group had allegedly amassed and brandished in training exercises in North Carolina this June and July gave pause to federal officials, the source added.

The firearms mentioned in the indictment include several semiautomatic weapons, including an AK-47 assault rifle and carbines modeled after the military's M14 and M16. [*]

Several of the defendants traveled to the Gaza Strip, Jordan and Israel in 2006 and 2007, as conflict in the region escalated, the indictment said. Israeli forces and Palestinian militants waged a series of battles in Gaza in the summer of 2006, and Israel briefly invaded Lebanon in July 2006 after rocket attacks by Hezbollah militants. But most defendants appear to have been turned away from the fighting and did not inflict casualties, according to court papers.

"These charges hammer home the point that terrorists and their supporters are not confined to the remote regions of some faraway land but can grow and fester right here at home," [*] [they guys were at it so long and almost surely came on the federale radar screen back in 1991, when Soviets had left Afhanistan and former Yugoslavia was ready to collapse] [*] said U.S. Attorney George E.B. Holding.

The charges come less than a week after prosecutors in Brooklyn accused a U.S. citizen from New York of traveling to Pakistan for terrorist training and of providing intelligence to al-Qaeda operatives about the Long Island Rail Road.

Boyd is also charged with lying to customs and FBI agents two years ago about the purpose of his visit to Israel. The indictment mentions conversations between Boyd and another defendant who shared his views, and e-mail messages that Boyd sent to a third defendant that "extolled the virtues" of dying a martyr.

Members of the group "radicalized" younger converts to believe that "violent jihad was a personal obligation on the part of every good Muslim," the indictment said. The defendants, who include Boyd's sons Zakariya and Dylan, could all face life imprisonment if convicted. [in Salafi Sunni Islam, it is a personal obligation of all able-bodied men] [the fatah or conquest from about 639 until nearly 729 CE was a series of offensive and defensive jihadis] [and as each new people was broght under the banner that obligation extended to them] [*]
The name of at least one other defendant appeared to be redacted in the indictment. A search is ongoing, another government official said.
© 2009 The Washington Post Compan

No Burqa For Clinton

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701903.html
No Burqa For Clinton
By Anne Applebaum
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [SecSTate Clinton] [use psci355] [use nsc] [cross individual-role] [*]
"It's time for Barack Obama to let Hillary Clinton take off her burqa." It's a line that brilliantly managed to belittle our female secretary of state under the guise of supporting her, to offend her and "defend" her at the same time: No wonder the insult that Tina Brown lobbed at the White House two weeks ago continues to echo around

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701903.html
No Burqa For Clinton
By Anne Applebaum
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [oped] [columnist] [SecSTate Clinton] [use psci355] [use nsc] [cross individual-role] [*]
"It's time for Barack Obama to let Hillary Clinton take off her burqa." It's a line that brilliantly managed to belittle our female secretary of state under the guise of supporting her, to offend her and "defend" her at the same time: No wonder the insult that Tina Brown lobbed at the White House two weeks ago continues to echo around Washington. Since Brown wrote her article (snidely entitled "Obama's Other Wife"), even Clinton has been forced to respond.

"I don't pay a lot of attention to what is said," she told an interviewer before setting off on a trip to Asia, during which she seemed deliberately to court media attention, and to care a lot about what was said. "I broke my elbow, not my larynx." And then, defensively: "I have been deeply involved in the shaping and implementation of our foreign policy."

Let Hillary take off her burqa. Yes, it was memorable. And yes, it reflected just how hard it is to understand how, exactly, foreign policy gets made in this country. If only President Obama really were sitting in the White House, scheming with his inner circle, dreaming up diabolical plots, sending out detailed instructions to Clinton, Vice President Biden and the director of the CIA -- issuing metaphorical "burqas" -- then at least we'd all find things easier to analyze. But that's how foreign policy gets made in North Korea, not the United States. [well put] [*] [use psci355] [great quote] [*]

The fact is that the post of secretary of state is a fabulously ill-defined job. If she so desires, Clinton can engage the world in multiple ways. She can visit, she can write and she can speak, knowing full well that everyone will hang on her every word. She can hold town-hall meetings in the countries she visits, and indeed she has done so. She has done television interviews, too, both in the United States and abroad. One presumes that she consults with the president on major speeches and key issues, but other than that, she sets her program.

Not only has she not been kept forcibly silent, in other words, she also possesses an extraordinary number of ways to set the agenda and has done so on several occasions. She created a small fuss in February by declaring that human rights debates with China aren't very important because "we already know what they are going to say." Since then she's gone out of her way to talk about human rights and its central importance to Americans. Last week in Asia, she caused a fuss by discussing a "defense umbrella" that the United States theoretically could create to protect the Middle East in case Iran gets nuclear weapons. Since then she, and others, have backpedaled, too: Leaving aside any implications for Iranian nuclear policy, her comments surely came as a surprise to other members of the administration who have been telling other people that missile defense programs are all on hold.

Clinton is not alone in possessing the power to make up policy on the spot, of course. Biden also has this power, and he too has used it to the fullest. Following a recent trip to Ukraine and Georgia, for example, he described the Russian economy as "withering" and its population as "shrinking." Although neither statement was untrue, exactly, Clinton herself felt obliged to publicly reassure the Russians that the United States still views their country as a "great power." It makes one wonder what the Russians really make of it all. [*]

But my point isn't that the United States should have a crystal-clear, perfectly unified foreign policy of the sort that can be made only by dictatorships. My point is that it is largely up to Clinton, not Obama, to determine what kind of secretary of state she will be. And although she can choose her issues and pick her moments, so far she has mostly made headlines by accident. Her recent speech at the Council on Foreign Relations, billed as an important policy statement, was bland and predictable. What we know of her official views on Russia can be encapsulated by Biden's vapid expression "let's press the reset button." She has engaged in some amusing back-and-forth with the North Koreans -- I give her high marks for getting them angry enough to hurl insults ("she looks like a primary schoolgirl and sometimes a pensioner going shopping") -- but we don't know yet how she thinks that problem will be solved.

I'm not sure that Clinton, or any secretary of state, needs to have an overarching "theory" in order to explain her views. But it is up to her to tell us what she thinks is important, and why. If she hasn't done so yet, that isn't the president's fault.
applebaumletters@washpost.com
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Why Won’t Obama Talk to Israel?

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/opinion/28benn.html
July 28, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor
Why Won’t Obama Talk to Israel?
By ALUF BENN
TEL AVIV [oped] [Haaretz editor] [on Obama administration and Bibi?] [use psci355] [*]
IN his global tours and TV appearances, President Obama has spoken to Arabs, Muslims, Iranians, Western Europeans, Eastern Europeans, Russians and Africans. His words have stirred emotions and been well received everywhere.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/opinion/28benn.html
July 28, 2009
Op-Ed Contributor
Why Won’t Obama Talk to Israel?
By ALUF BENN
TEL AVIV [oped] [Haaretz editor] [on Obama administration and Bibi?] [use psci355] [*]
IN his global tours and TV appearances, President Obama has spoken to Arabs, Muslims, Iranians, Western Europeans, Eastern Europeans, Russians and Africans. His words have stirred emotions and been well received everywhere.

But he hasn’t bothered to speak directly to Israelis. [*]

And the effect? Six months into his presidency, Israelis find themselves increasingly suspicious of Mr. Obama. All they see is American pressure on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to freeze settlements, a request that’s been interpreted here as political arm-twisting meant to please the Arab street [well, that’s disappointing when administration after administration has fallen over itself in Israel’s benefit and at the expense of America’s relations with the Arab world] [I guess I see why so few inside the administration are rushing to give an Israeli speech] [*] at Israel’s expense — or simply to express the president’s dislike for Mr. Netanyahu.

This would seem counterproductive, given the importance the president has placed on resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. If Israel is part of the problem, it’s also part of the solution. Yet so far, neither the president nor any senior administration official has given a speech or an interview aimed at an Israeli audience, beyond brief statements made at diplomatic photo ops. [I take the point but Obama has been given little more than constant grief from Israel] [from my perspective Israelis (and obviously generalizations are impossible to avoid here) are ingrates!] [*]

The Arabs got the Cairo speech; we got silence.

This policy of ignoring Israel carries a price. Though Mr. Obama has succeeded in prodding Mr. Netanyahu to accept the idea of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, he has failed to induce Israel to impose a freeze on settlements. In fact, he has failed even to stir debate about the merits of one: no Israeli political figure has stood up to Mr. Netanyahu and begged him to support Mr. Obama; not even the Israeli left, desperate for a new agenda, has adopted Mr. Obama as its icon. [again, I take his point completely] [but I wonder why the Israeli left isn’t helping Obama by helping to create incentives instead of the seeming constant rain of crap from various Israeli corners?] [*]

As a result, Mr. Netanyahu enjoys a virtual domestic consensus over his rejection of the settlement freeze. Moreover, he has succeeded in portraying Mr. Obama as a shaky ally. [again, it’s pretty hard to see how any American president can be viewed so negatively when the US has been Israel’s best friend by far] [by far!] [*] In Mr. Netanyahu’s narrative, the president has fallen under the influence of top aides — in this case Rahm Emanuel and David Axelrod — whom the prime minister has called “self-hating Jews.” Meanwhile, Mr. Netanyahu is the defender of national glory in face of unfair pressure, someone who sticks to the first commandment of Israeli culture: thou shalt never be the freier (that is, the dupe).

So far, Israelis have embraced Mr. Netanyahu’s message. [if I’m Obama I have two nearly simultaneous reactions] [1) I think I have to do better and convince some important Israelis of the seriousness of my purpose; and 2) I’m depressed when I have tried to be the most honest broker in years and my thanks is I’m considered suspect by Israelis and the current PM (a guy who tinkers in America’s domestic politics way beyond the pale…) contiunually dumps on me in speeches and few Israelis come to my defense!] [what a mess] [another inclination, and I don’t know how long or seriously this is entertained if I’m Obama, is: since Israelis are apparently going to punish the American president who actually tries to be an honest broker (as objectively fair as possible with both governments) I’m beginning to wonder if the US might not be better off decoupling, reducing the degree of relations between the US and Israel…?] [*] A Jerusalem Post poll of Israeli Jews last month indicated that only 6 percent of those surveyed considered the Obama administration to be pro-Israel, while 50 percent said that its policies are more pro-Palestinian than pro-Israeli. Less scientifically: Israeli rightists have — in columns, articles and public statements — taken to calling the president by his middle name, Hussein, as proof of his pro-Arab tendencies.

What went wrong? Several explanations come to mind. [*]

First, in the 16 rosy years of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, Israelis became spoiled by unfettered presidential attention. [agreed] [it used to be the Democrts had the Israeli vote] [then the Republicans decided to go after it in a serious way] [the GOP’s change of mind and the GOP’s religious right (Christian Zionist movement) combined in a powerful way] [**] Memories of State Department “Arabists” leading American policy in the Middle East were erased. The White House coordinated its policy with Jerusalem, and stayed out of the way when Israel embarked on controversial military offensives in Lebanon and Gaza. This approach infuriated America’s Arab and European allies, which blamed Washington for one-sidedness — something they were willing to forgive of Bill Clinton but not of George W. Bush. [*]

Mr. Obama came to office determined to repair America’s broken alliances in Europe and the Middle East. One way to do this — to prove that he was the opposite of his predecessor — was to place some distance between Israel and himself. [*]

Second, Mr. Obama’s quest for diplomacy has appeared to Israelis as dangerous American naïveté. [*]The president offered a hand to the Iranians, and got nothing, merely giving them more time to advance their nuclear program. In Israeli eyes, he was humiliated by North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests. And he failed to move Arab governments to take steps to normalize relations with Israel. Conclusion: Mr. Obama is a softie, eager to please his listeners and avoid confrontation with anyone who is not Mr. Netanyahu. [that may well be true but it’s wholly unfair] [DPRK detonated its first nuke under Bush (fall 2006); the US got less out of Iran under Bush than ever; the US alienated many European allies under Bush; etc] [so just throwing out platitudes for Israel gets Israelis to like the American president even if he does little of substantive value?] [*]

Third, Mr. Obama seems to have confused American Jews with Israelis. [*]We are close emotionally and politically, but we are different. We speak Hebrew and not English, we live in the Middle East and have separate historical narratives. Mr. Obama’s stop at Buchenwald and his strong rejection of Holocaust denial, immediately after his Cairo speech, appealed to American Jews but fell flat in Israel. [I think this is an important insight but again, I fear the result of an Obama adviser is to recommend there’s no pleasing Israelis, Mr. President] [the only thing they will give you credit for is being decisively pro-Israel (even to the extent of alienation the Arab world and making peace untenable)] [that being the case, perhaps it’s time to start cutting them loose] [take care to keep American Jews in your camp but cut Israelis off as the ingrates they are!] [*] Here we are taught that Zionist determination and struggle — not guilt over the Holocaust — brought Jews a homeland. Mr. Obama’s speech, which linked Israel’s existence to the Jewish tragedy, infuriated many Israelis who sensed its closeness to the narrative of enemies like Mahmoud Ahmedinejad.

Fourth, as far as most Israelis are concerned, Mr. Obama has made a mistake in focusing on a settlement freeze. For starters, mainstream Israelis rarely have anything to do with the settlements; many have no idea where they are, even when they’re a half-hour’s drive from Tel Aviv. [another important point] [but for goodness sake, elsewhere in the world the settlement issues are huge—just because most Israelis are indifferent to the settlements does not mean that the issues are unimportant] [the Islamic nation-states fo the world 57?, find settlements extraordinarily important] [*]

More important: in the past decade, repeated peace negotiations and diplomatic statements have indicated that larger, closer-to-home settlements (the “settlement blocs”) will remain in Israeli hands under any two-state solution. Why, then, insist on a total freeze everywhere? And why deny with such force — as the administration did — the existence of previous understandings between the United States and Israel over limited settlement construction? There is simply too much evidence proving that such an understanding existed. To Israelis, the claim undermined Mr. Obama’s credibility — and strengthened Mr. Netanyahu’s position.

Perhaps there are good reasons behind Mr. Obama’s Middle East policy. Perhaps the settlement freeze is in Israel’s best interest. Perhaps the president is truly committed to Israel’s long-term security and well-being. Perhaps his popularity in the Arab street is the missing ingredient of peacemaking.

But until the president talks to us, we won’t know. Next time you’re in the neighborhood, Mr. President, speak to us directly. We will surely listen.
Aluf Benn is the editor at large of the Israeli newspaper Haaretz. [I find this piece incredibly important, incredibly insightful, and incredibly depressing] [this was written by an editor from Haaretz, the only Israei newspaper I read regularly and the one I most respect which is why I’m so depressed by it] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Parsing What the Enemy’s Up To

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/opinion/28tue3.html
July 28, 2009
Editorial
Parsing What the Enemy’s Up To
[editorial] [thankfully, somebody is actually remembering that transnational threat whom the US has not likely seen the end] [jihadis and what’s next?] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Almost eight years after the alarming lessons of 9/11, the Senate Intelligence Committee finds the nation’s spy agencies mumbling more than mastering the languages of the nation’s adversaries. The committee did not mince words in pronouncing the intelligence community’s foreign language capabilities to be “abysmal.” [alas, when society berates other languages, other cultures, and makes them the object of society’s wrath, it is likely that when that same society needs quick reaction on learning other culture’s languages, problems arise!] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/opinion/28tue3.html
July 28, 2009
Editorial
Parsing What the Enemy’s Up To
[editorial] [thankfully, somebody is actually remembering that transnational threat whom the US has not likely seen the end] [jihadis and what’s next?] [use psci469b, 355] [*]
Almost eight years after the alarming lessons of 9/11, the Senate Intelligence Committee finds the nation’s spy agencies mumbling more than mastering the languages of the nation’s adversaries. The committee did not mince words in pronouncing the intelligence community’s foreign language capabilities to be “abysmal.” [alas, when society berates other languages, other cultures, and makes them the object of society’s wrath, it is likely that when that same society needs quick reaction on learning other culture’s languages, problems arise!] [*]

“The cadre of intelligence professionals capable of speaking, reading, or understanding critical regional languages such as Pashto, Dari or Urdu remains essentially nonexistent,” the committee warned in a lengthy critique of the C.I.A. and other agencies that raised worries over the loss of information vital to national preparedness. [too few incentives on those I imagine] [what about Arabic?] [if Arabic is being learned at high clip, then it probably means that incentive structure is screwed up more than most else—which is positive because it’s fixable] [*] The panel laid bare these problems in the course of approving an intelligence spending bill.

It’s no secret that the intelligence community has been reeling from the disclosure of its shortcomings in the lead-up to the attacks of 9/11 and to the Bush administration’s invasion of Iraq. The Senate panel performs a worthy service in pointing to the failure to improve on one of the basics: information gathering, let alone eavesdropping, means agencies must do a far better job at language education and hiring new people with needed skills to grasp what dangers may be out there. [frankly, the leadership of the CIA (and IC more generally) really let down its people during the Bush43 years] [too many caved in to the pressure from the veep’s neconservative clique and betrayed the CIA’s long-term interests to some short-termed expediencies] [*&]

The Senate report also warns that intelligence agencies are falling short in tracking rising threats from cyberthieves and others intent on attacking the nation’s information networks. And it once more points to an over-reliance on private contractors — who were found to make up 29 percent of the intelligence community’s personnel last year, while consuming 49 percent of its personnel budget. [so how’ that privatization working out?] [*]

The Senate committee suggested that the Obama administration create an independent commission to help identify gaps in intelligence policy. Like the language gap, this idea goes back to the 9/11 Commission Report, and seems worth adopting now. [frankly, while I’m not against it, we already know many of the things that are wrong and we don’t need yet another commission to tell us] [instead the US needs some clever solutions quickly] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Myanmar Dissident Verdict on Friday

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29myanmar.html
July 29, 2009
Myanmar Dissident Verdict on Friday
By SETH MYDANS [Bruma] [Myanmar] [SEAsia] [the military juanta in Rangoon] [political prisoners] [world’s most famous political prisoner, Ms. San Suu Kyi] [Burma’s odd political structure] [followup] [*]
BANGKOK — Final arguments concluded Tuesday in Myanmar in the trial of the pro-democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, and the court announced that it would deliver a verdict Friday, diplomats said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/asia/29myanmar.html
July 29, 2009
Myanmar Dissident Verdict on Friday
By SETH MYDANS [Bruma] [Myanmar] [SEAsia] [the military juanta in Rangoon] [political prisoners] [world’s most famous political prisoner, Ms. San Suu Kyi] [Burma’s odd political structure] [followup] [*]
BANGKOK — Final arguments concluded Tuesday in Myanmar in the trial of the pro-democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, and the court announced that it would deliver a verdict Friday, diplomats said.

Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi, 64, faces a term of up to five years in prison on charges of violating the terms of her long house arrest when an American intruder swam across a lake and spent two nights at her villa.

After the hearing, Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi, looking healthy and composed, thanked foreign diplomats who had been permitted to attend five of the sessions since the trial began May 18.

“She said, ‘Thank you for trying to promote a just outcome,’ ” a diplomat said by telephone from Yangon, the main city in Myanmar. Another diplomat said Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi had expressed doubts about such an outcome in the highly political trial.

Both spoke on condition of anonymity because of their embassies’ policies.

Many analysts say they believe that a guilty verdict has already been determined. They say the trial is intended to keep Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi in custody at least through the parliamentary election expected next year.

It will be the first election since 1990, when an overwhelming victory by Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi’s party was set aside by the ruling military junta as it clung to power.

The trial has drawn condemnation from around the world, with leaders including President Obama demanding Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi’s release.

Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi faces up to five years in prison for allowing the American to stay at her villa. She responded in court that she had not been aware he was coming and had asked him to leave, but relented when he said he was exhausted and needed shelter.

In a separate case, the intruder, John Yettaw, 53, of Falcon, Mo., spoke for 15 minutes in court Tuesday following the conclusion of the case against Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi. He faces at least five years in prison for abetting Mrs. Aung San Suu Kyi’s violation of house arrest, breaking immigration law and violating local ordinances by swimming across the lake.

He has said in court that he acted to save her after having a dream that she would be attacked by terrorists.

The New Light of Myanmar, a government-controlled newspaper, said Tuesday that Mr. Yettaw might have been acting at the behest of unnamed backers.

“The aim of his meeting with Daw Aung San Suu Kyi has not been known clearly,” it said. “He even left two chadors and dark glasses” as disguises for her.
“Was it aimed at taking her out of the house?” the newspaper asked. “There are many points to ponder.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Young Japanese Women Vie for a Once-Scorned Job

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/business/global/28hostess.html
July 28, 2009
Young Japanese Women Vie for a Once-Scorned Job
By HIROKO TABUCHI [Japan] [Tokyo] [Japan’s domestic politics] [* girls from and historic values] [unique Japanese] [use psci350] [use ir text] [global economic meltdown’s effects on Japan’s society] [Geisha iconography?] [*]
TOKYO — The women who pour drinks in Japan’s sleek gentlemen’s clubs were once shunned because their duties were considered immodest: lavishing adoring (albeit nonsexual) attention on men [*]for a hefty fee.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/business/global/28hostess.html
July 28, 2009
Young Japanese Women Vie for a Once-Scorned Job
By HIROKO TABUCHI [Japan] [Tokyo] [Japan’s domestic politics] [* girls from and historic values] [unique Japanese] [use psci350] [use ir text] [global economic meltdown’s effects on Japan’s society] [Geisha iconography?] [*]
TOKYO — The women who pour drinks in Japan’s sleek gentlemen’s clubs were once shunned because their duties were considered immodest: lavishing adoring (albeit nonsexual) attention on men [*]for a hefty fee.

But with that line of work, called hostessing, among the most lucrative jobs available to women and with the country neck-deep in a recession, hostess positions are increasingly coveted, and hostesses themselves are gaining respectability and even acclaim. Japan’s worst recession since World War II is changing mores.

“More women from a diversity of backgrounds are looking for hostess work,” said Kentaro Miura, who helps manage seven clubs in Kabuki-cho, Tokyo’s glittering red-light district. “There is less resistance to becoming a hostess. In fact, it’s seen as a glamorous job.”

But behind this trend is a less-than-glamorous reality. Employment opportunities for young women, especially those with no college education, are often limited to low-paying, dead-end jobs or temp positions. [*]

Even before the economic downturn, almost 70 percent of women ages 20 to 24 worked jobs with few benefits and little job security, according to a government labor survey. The situation has worsened in the recession.

For that reason, a growing number of Japanese women seem to believe that work as a hostess, which can easily pay $100,000 a year, and as much as $300,000 for the biggest stars, makes economic sense. [*]

Even part-time hostesses and those at the low end of the pay scale earn at least $20 an hour, almost twice the rate of most temp positions.

In a 2009 survey of 1,154 high school girls, by the Culture Studies Institute in Tokyo, hostessing ranked No. 12 out of the 40 most popular professions, ahead of public servant (18) and nurse (22). [*]

“It’s only when you’re young that you can earn money just by drinking with men,” said Mari Hamada, 17.

Many of the cabaret clubs, or kyabakura, are swank establishments of dark wood and plush cushions, where waiters in bow ties and hostesses in evening gowns flit about guests sipping fantastically expensive wine.

Some hostesses work to pay their way through college or toward a vocational degree, or to save up to start their own businesses.

Hostessing does not involve prostitution, though religious and women’s groups point out that hostesses can be pressured into having sex with clients, and that hostessing can be an entry point into Japan’s sprawling underground sex industry. [it’s a bit cliché but I have got to say that I find it largely accurate] [in my travels around Asia, I have found places where more grotuesque things occur (Bangkok for one); but I have never found a society that is more tolerant of men having professional escorts on the side; serious bank and serious drink] [*]

Hostesses say that those are rare occurrences, and that exhaustion from a life of partying is a more common hazard in their profession.

Young women are drawn nonetheless to Cinderella stories like that of Eri Momoka, a single mother who became a hostess and worked her way out of penury to start a TV career and her own line of clothing and accessories.

“I often get fan mail from young girls in elementary school who say they want to be like me,” said Ms. Momoka, 27, interviewed in her trademark seven-inch heels. “To a little girl, a hostess is like a modern-day princess.”

Even one member of the Japanese Parliament, Kazumi Ota, was a hostess. That revelation once would have ignited a huge scandal, but it has not. She will run for re-election on the leading opposition party ticket, the Democratic Party of Japan, in the national election next month, and the ticket is expected to unseat the ruling party. [the Liberal Democratic Party is neither!] [*]

It is unclear how many hostesses work in Japan. In Tokyo alone, about 13,000 establishments offer late-night entertainment by hostesses (and some male hosts), including members-only clubs frequented by politicians and company executives, as well as cheaper cabaret clubs.

Hostesses tend to drinks, offer attentive conversation and accompany men on dates off premises, but do not generally have sex for money. (Men who seek that can go to prostitutes, though prostitution is illegal.)

Hostesses are often ranked according to popularity among clients, with the No. 1 of each club assuming the status of a star.

Mineri Hayashi has made it to the top of her club, Celux, six years after coming to Tokyo from northern Japan. One recent evening, she readied herself for an elaborate birthday event her club was throwing in her honor.

Outside the club, bigger-than-life posters of Ms. Hayashi adorned the street. At the club, a dozen men put up balloons and lined up Champagne bottles.

The club’s clientele is diverse, including workaday salarymen, business owners and other men unwinding after work.

Celux hopes to make more than $60,000 on Ms. Hayashi’s birthday party, which will be attended by scores of regulars.

“Life has been fun, and I want to keep on having fun,” Ms. Hayashi said, placing a tiara in her hair. She talks of plans to retire next year and travel abroad.

Her 17-year-old sister, who also wants to be a hostess, may succeed her. Ms. Hayashi is supportive. “I just want her to be happy,” she said.

Popular culture is also fueling hostessing’s popularity. TV sitcoms are starting to depict cabaret hostesses as women building successful careers. Hostesses are also writing best-selling books, be they on money management or the art of conversation.

A magazine that features hostess fashion has become wildly popular with women outside the trade, who mimic the heavily made-up eyes and big, coiffed hair.

But Serina Hoshino, 24, another Tokyo hostess, is exhausted from the late nights and heavy drinking.

Slumped in her chair at the M.A.C. hair salon, she talked about endless after-hours dates with clients. Stumbling back home at dawn, she sleeps the rest of the day. On her days off, she hardly leaves her apartment.

Her reward is about $16,000 a month, almost 10 times the salary of most women her age. [*] [ if they can handle it without falling prey to the externalities of the life style: alcoholism; STDs; premature aging; the rest] [*]

“It’s nice to be independent, but it’s very stressful,” Ms. Hoshino said, speaking through a cloud of hair spray and cigarette smoke.

In recent months, clubs have also started to feel the squeeze of the bad economy. Hostess wages are starting to fall to as little as $16 an hour. Still, that rate remains above many daytime jobs here.

So, the young women keep coming. The Kabuki-cho district is lined with dark-suited scouts recruiting women. One club recruiter said some women turn up to interviews with their mothers in tow, which never would have happened when the job was less respectable.

“Women are being laid off from daytime jobs and so look for work with us,” said Hana Nakagawa, who runs a placement agency for higher-end clubs in Tokyo.

She gets about 40 inquiries a week from women looking for hostess jobs, twice as many as before the downturn.

Atsushi Miura, an expert on the issue, says hostessing will be popular among Japanese women as long as other well-paying jobs are scarce.
“Some people still say hostesses are wasting their life away,” he said. “But rather than criticizing them, Japan should create more jobs for young women.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

China: Uighur’s Visit Criticized

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28briefs-China.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | Asia
China: Uighur’s Visit Criticized
By SHARON LaFRANIERE [China] [PRC] [vast hinterlands where Han compete with other ethnicities] [global economic meltdown during which otherwise often tenable complications become untenable] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [followup] [*]
China criticized Japan on Monday for allowing a visit by Rebiya Kadeer, [the CA Uighurs leader?] [*] an exiled Uighur leader who China said incited riots in the Xinjiang

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28briefs-China.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | Asia
China: Uighur’s Visit Criticized
By SHARON LaFRANIERE [China] [PRC] [vast hinterlands where Han compete with other ethnicities] [global economic meltdown during which otherwise often tenable complications become untenable] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [followup] [*]
China criticized Japan on Monday for allowing a visit by Rebiya Kadeer, [the CA Uighurs leader?] [*] an exiled Uighur leader who China said incited riots in the Xinjiang region this month. Ms. Kadeer, left, a critic of China’s policies toward the Uighurs who lives in the United States, plans to address journalists on Wednesday and give a lecture on Thursday. “How would the people of Japan feel if a violent crime occurs in Japan and its mastermind is invited by a third country?” said Cui Tiankai, China’s ambassador to Japan. Nearly 200 people died in the violence between the Uighurs and the dominant Han Chinese. Ms. Kadeer denies any involvement in the violence.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

China’s President Congratulates Taiwan Leader on Election as Chairman of Party

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28taiwan.html
July 28, 2009
China’s President Congratulates Taiwan Leader on Election as Chairman of Party
By SHARON LaFRANIERE [China] [PRC] [global economic meltdown] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [China-PRC relationship with Taiwan (ROC)] [*]
BEIJING — President Hu Jintao of China congratulated the Taiwanese leader Ma Ying-jeou on Monday, after his election this weekend as chief of Taiwan’s governing party, a victory that analysts said could bolster Mr. Ma’s efforts to pursue engagement and economic ties with China.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28taiwan.html
July 28, 2009
China’s President Congratulates Taiwan Leader on Election as Chairman of Party
By SHARON LaFRANIERE [China] [PRC] [global economic meltdown] [use psci350, 390-5] [use ir text] [China ethos] [China-PRC relationship with Taiwan (ROC)] [*]
BEIJING — President Hu Jintao of China congratulated the Taiwanese leader Ma Ying-jeou on Monday, after his election this weekend as chief of Taiwan’s governing party, a victory that analysts said could bolster Mr. Ma’s efforts to pursue engagement and economic ties with China.

Mr. Ma ran uncontested on Sunday in the election for Kuomintang party chief. He won 92.5 percent of about 300,000 votes cast, with a turnout of 58 percent, [it’s actually quite interesting to note how much the KMT and CCP jhave in common: the one China policy, extreme Chinese nationalism; rejection of independence; etc] [*] the party said.

Since his election 14 months ago as Taiwan’s president, Mr. Ma has pursued warmer relations with China, [*]but not always with the wholehearted support of his own party.

“As party chairman, he can try to renovate the Kuomintang,” and try to overcome that opposition, said Bruce Jacobs, who directs Taiwan research at Australia’s Monash University.

China’s state-run media suggested that Mr. Ma’s election could set the stage for a historic meeting between him and Mr. Hu as party chiefs. In addition to being president, Mr. Hu is general secretary of China’s governing Communist Party. [*]

Any meeting between them as heads of state would immediately raise the delicate issue of Taiwan’s sovereignty. Contacts between the sides on a party-to-party basis might be more politically acceptable.

Beijing claims sovereignty over Taiwan, which has been ruled separately since 1949, when the Chinese civil war ended with the defeat of Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang forces. [the first and second Taiwan Straights Affairs in the 1950s] [*]

Mr. Ma has ruled out any meeting for now, saying that the Taiwanese people are split over the issue.

Mr. Jacobs said a meeting was unlikely. He characterized the exchange of messages between Mr. Hu and Mr. Ma about the election as “probably more of a formality.”

In his congratulatory telegram to Mr. Ma, Mr. Hu said, “I hope our two parties can continue to promote peaceful development of cross-strait relations, deepen mutual trust, boost the well-being of compatriots on both sides and create a glorious resurrection of the Chinese race.”

Mr. Ma’s reply said in part, “We should never stop efforts to consolidate peace in the Taiwan Strait, resume regional stability and sustain prosperity based on the principles of facing reality, building trust, shelving disputes and creating a win-win scenario.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

U.S. Turns Off News Billboard Atop Its Mission in Havana

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28cuba.html
July 28, 2009
U.S. Turns Off News Billboard Atop Its Mission in Havana
By MARC LACEY [Cuba] [Latin America and Caribbean] [the US-Ciba relationship since the late 1950s: Ike (R), JFK(D), LBJ(D), Nixon(R), Ford(R), Carter(D), Reagan(R), Bush 41 (R), Clinton(D), Bush 43(R), Obama(D)] [talk about USFP continuity] [use psci355] [*]
MEXICO CITY — The Obama administration has pulled the plug on an electronic billboard outside the American diplomatic mission in Havana that was used to tweak the Cuban government with pro-democracy messages and became a symbol of the bad blood between the two countries.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28cuba.html
July 28, 2009
U.S. Turns Off News Billboard Atop Its Mission in Havana
By MARC LACEY [Cuba] [Latin America and Caribbean] [the US-Ciba relationship since the late 1950s: Ike (R), JFK(D), LBJ(D), Nixon(R), Ford(R), Carter(D), Reagan(R), Bush 41 (R), Clinton(D), Bush 43(R), Obama(D)] [talk about USFP continuity] [use psci355] [*]
MEXICO CITY — The Obama administration has pulled the plug on an electronic billboard outside the American diplomatic mission in Havana that was used to tweak the Cuban government with pro-democracy messages and became a symbol of the bad blood between the two countries.

When the billboard went up in 2006, some saw it as an innovative diplomatic stick in the eye of the government of Fidel Castro. Others, though, considered the 25 electrical panels installed by the Bush administration in the fifth-floor windows of the American Interests Section to be fundamentally silly. [*]

Mr. Castro, who ceded the presidency to his brother Raúl last year, was clearly not amused by the bright red messages, many of which criticized his government for human rights abuses.

In response, he blocked the message board with huge black flags hanging on 100-foot-high flag poles and erected billboards nearby that denounced President George W. Bush. Cuban security guards were also stationed in strategic spots to shoo away any Cubans who might gaze upward at the five-foot-high news ticker, which overlooked the Malecón, Havana’s coastal highway. [incredibly immature from both sides] [*]

President Obama, while keeping in place the economic embargo of Cuba, has taken a series of steps to improve relations with the government. The unplugging of the billboard, which was done quietly last month, follows a loosening of travel restrictions and the beginning of migration talks with the Cuban government.

“We believe that the billboard was really not effective as a means of delivering information to the Cuban people,” the State Department spokesman, Ian Kelly, said Monday. He noted that the Cuban government had removed some of its negative billboards around the mission earlier this year, which he said the United States viewed as “a positive gesture.”

The billboard’s messages ran the gamut. There were sports scores and news items that had nothing to do with Cuba. But there were also political messages, like the one tweaking the Cuban government’s elite for navigating the island in fancy cars while the masses were forced to hitchhike. [*] [in other words, pointing out the divergence between righ and poor in capitalist society?] [and that was a victory for US?] [*]

The United States and Cuba broke diplomatic relations in 1961, but still engage with each other in various ways.

“Taking down the billboard has permitted both sides to act like mature adults,” said Robert A. Pastor, a professor of international relations at American University. “That’s the most hopeful thing we’ve seen.”

But not everyone viewed it that way. “The only people that are happy about having the news ticker turned off are the Castro brothers,” said Mauricio Claver-Carone, director of the U.S.-Cuba Democracy PAC in Washington.
Damien Cave contributed reporting from Miami.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Mexico: Rehabilitation Program for Addicts With Minor Offenses

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28briefs-Mexico.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Mexico: Rehabilitation Program for Addicts With Minor Offenses
By ANTONIO BETANCOURT [Mexico] [the Americas] [Mexico’s violent drug cartels luring young Mexican Americans into the muscles business] [so massive has the drug business become that massive criminal enterprises are built on it] [followup] [*]
The attorney general, Eduardo Medina-Mora, announced a pilot program on Monday

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28briefs-Mexico.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | The Americas
Mexico: Rehabilitation Program for Addicts With Minor Offenses
By ANTONIO BETANCOURT [Mexico] [the Americas] [Mexico’s violent drug cartels luring young Mexican Americans into the muscles business] [so massive has the drug business become that massive criminal enterprises are built on it] [followup] [*]
The attorney general, Eduardo Medina-Mora, announced a pilot program on Monday that would create special drug courts that would send addicts who commit minor offenses to rehabilitation instead of to jail. Mr. Medina-Mora made the announcement after meeting with R. Gil Kerlikowske, the Obama administration’s drug czar.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

New Strategy Urged in Mexico

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703074.html
New Strategy Urged in Mexico
Calderón's U.S.-Backed War Against Drug Cartels Losing Political Support
By William Booth and Steve Fainaru
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Mexico] [the Americas] [Mexico’s violent drug cartels luring young Mexican Americans into the muscles business] [so massive has the drug business become that massive criminal enterprises are built on it] [though they originate in Mexico they have become transnational mostly] [they have no alliance to Mexico’s laws] [recurring reports of incredible torture and abuses as routine] [followup] [the Mormon-cartel dispute that grew violent recently!] [*]
MEXICO CITY -- President Felipe Calderón is under growing pressure to overhaul a U.S.-backed anti-narcotics strategy that many political leaders and analysts said is failing amid spectacular drug cartel assaults against the government. [I should think so] [and if most American cannot understand why, they a) know so little about Mexico’s

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072703074.html
New Strategy Urged in Mexico
Calderón's U.S.-Backed War Against Drug Cartels Losing Political Support
By William Booth and Steve Fainaru
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Mexico] [the Americas] [Mexico’s violent drug cartels luring young Mexican Americans into the muscles business] [so massive has the drug business become that massive criminal enterprises are built on it] [though they originate in Mexico they have become transnational mostly] [they have no alliance to Mexico’s laws] [recurring reports of incredible torture and abuses as routine] [followup] [the Mormon-cartel dispute that grew violent recently!] [*]
MEXICO CITY -- President Felipe Calderón is under growing pressure to overhaul a U.S.-backed anti-narcotics strategy that many political leaders and analysts said is failing amid spectacular drug cartel assaults against the government. [I should think so] [and if most American cannot understand why, they a) know so little about Mexico’s situation that it’s embarrassing and b) they don’t understand democratic governance] [Calderon has been a standup guy and in taking on the illicit drug cartels which are a huge problem for the US too, he’s stuck his neck way out] [the numbers of murders in Mexico over the past few years are stunning] [stats such as more murder in Tijuana this, just last year for instance, than the number of KIAs American has lost in Afghanistan since 9/11!] [*]

There are now sustained calls in Mexico for a change in tactics, even from allies within Calderón's political party, who say the deployment of 45,000 soldiers to fight the cartels is a flawed plan that relies too heavily on the blunt force of the military to stem soaring violence and lawlessness.

"The people of Mexico are losing hope, and it is urgent that Congress, the political parties and the president reconsider this strategy," said Ramón Galindo, a senator and Calderón supporter who is a former mayor of Ciudad Juarez, a border city where more than 1,100 people have been killed this year.

U.S. officials said they now believe Mexico faces a longer and bloodier campaign than anticipated and is likely to require more American aid. U.S. and Mexican officials increasingly draw comparisons to Colombia, where from 2000 to 2006 the United States spent $6 billion to help neutralize the cartels that once dominated the drug trade. While violence is sharply down in Colombia, cocaine production is up. [the demand is almost all from America] [*]

Mexico, nearly twice Colombia's size, faces a more daunting challenge, many officials and analysts said , in part because it sits adjacent to the United States, the largest illegal drug market in the world. In addition, at least seven major cartels are able to recruit from Mexico's swelling ranks of impoverished youth and thousands of disenfranchised soldiers and police officers.

"The question is whether the country can withstand another three years of this, with violence that undermines the credibility of the government," said Carlos Flores, who has studied the drug war extensively for Mexico City's Center for Investigations and Advanced Studies in Social Anthropology. "I'd like to be more optimistic, but what I see is more of the same polarizing and failed strategy."

U.S. and Mexican government officials say the military strategy, while difficult, is working. Since Calderón took office in December 2006, authorities have arrested 76,765 suspected drug traffickers at all levels and have extradited 187 cartel members to the United States. Calderón's security advisers said they have few options besides the army -- as they just begin to vet and retrain the police forces they say will ultimately take over the fight.

"No one has told us what alternative we have," said Interior Minister Fernando Gómez Mont, gently slapping his palm on a table during an interview. "We are committed to enduring this wave of violence. We are strengthening our ability to protect the innocent victims of this process, which is the most important thing. We will not look the other way."

Drug-related deaths during the 2 1/2 years of Calderon's administration passed 12,000 this month. [*]Rather than shrinking or growing weaker, the Mexican cartels are using their wealth and increasing power to expand into Central America, cocaine-producing regions of the Andes and maritime trafficking routes in the eastern Pacific, according to law enforcement authorities.

In Mexico, neither high-profile arrests nor mass troop deployments have stopped the cartels from unleashing spectacular acts of violence. This month, the cartel called La Familia launched three days of coordinated attacks in eight cities in the western state of Michoacan. Responding to the arrest of one its leaders, La Familia abducted, tortured and killed a dozen federal agents; their corpses were found piled up beside a highway. [I wish Americans would try to imagine similar excesses here and what the public would be demanding] [I think it’s difficult to exaggerate just how exercised people would be and the sorts of incredible demands they would make] [*]

In Ciudad Juarez, just across the border from El Paso, Calderón flooded the city with 10,000 troops and federal police officers in February in an effort to stem runaway violence. After a two-month lull, drug-related homicides surged 307 percent, to nearly eight killings a day in June. On Wednesday, a man eating lunch at a Denny's restaurant across the street from the U.S. Consulate was shot six times in the head by a trio of gunmen.

Lawmakers in Chihuahua state, where Juarez is located, debated this month whether Calderón's surge was "a total failure." Antonio Andreu, president of the state legislature's commission on security, said it appears that drug gangs have infiltrated the military's intelligence networks and figured out how to circumvent the gauntlet of security forces in Juarez.

Héctor Hawley Morelos, the state forensics chief for Juarez, said he expects this year to be bloodier than the last. He said the soldiers don't help solve crime cases and often get in the way of investigations.

But Calderón has no intention of changing course, according to senior Mexican officials. In some respects, the government has become more combative. After a La Familia leader called a television station and said the cartel was "open to dialogue," Gómez Mont vowed that the government would never strike a deal with the traffickers. [at this point, it’s probably well past the point of return] [he now has to gut it out almost whatever the cost] [*]

“We’re waiting for you,” he warned La Familia.

In the interview, Gómez Mont said that to ease up now would be to sanction criminal behavior and its corrupting influence on Mexican society.

“We have to do this while we are strong enough to do it,” he said. “We know we are right. Do I have to accept corruption as a way of stabilizing our society? No. I have to act.”

“This battle is a full frontal assault,” Monte Alejandro Rubido, Calderon’s senior adviser on drug policy on Mexico’s National Security Council, said in an interview. “There are no alternatives.”

Calderón is highly regarded in U.S. law enforcement circles for declaring war on the traffickers and increasing cooperation between the two governments. Asked whether he would make any changes to the Mexican president’s strategy, Anthony Placido, chief of intelligence for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, replied: “None.” [*]

But Placido said he was concerned that Calderón was fighting not only well-entrenched criminal organizations. "He's also fighting the clock," Placido said. "Public support for this can't remain high forever. He's really got to deliver a death blow, or significant body blow, in the short term to keep the public engaged." [I’m afraid that might be true] [perhaps he should enlist the US in a handful of major takedowns of cartel key leaders?] [I’m not sure if the US would be on board and even if the administration was, would the military allow itself to be dragged into such a bizaare mess?] [and if it failed, omg] [*]

Calderón appears to be increasingly isolated in Mexico, weakened by his party's defeat in recent mid-term elections and by the relentless carnage. The cover of the influential news magazine Proceso this week featured a photo of the 12 federal agents, their bound and mutilated corpses in a pile, beneath the headline: "Calderón's War."

"The president feels alone, and he told me that personally," said Galindo, the senator, who belongs to Calderón's conservative National Action Party.

Galindo said he urged Calderón to change course. Instead of relying on the army to destroy the cartels, he said, the federal government should work to strengthen local communities that are most vulnerable to the traffickers.

"Every day that we delay making these communities more self-sufficient, it is going to become more difficult to find good people prepared to serve as mayor in any city -- no matter how large or small -- because it's like a death sentence," he said.

Dan Lund, president of the MUND Group polling organization, said public support for Calderón's strategy appears to be weakest in the places where the federal government needs it most. "In a series of national surveys, polls consistently have found a reasonable but cautious level of support for using the military in the front lines against the cartels," he said. "But in all the states where the military is actually deployed, the support goes down, sometimes dramatically."

The situation has been exacerbated by the global economic crisis, which has cast millions of Mexicans into poverty. José Luis Piñeyro, a Mexican military analyst who maintains close ties with the armed forces, said rising unemployment and poverty "is creating what I call an 'army in reserve,' " for the traffickers. [global economic meltdown has exacerbated the already alarming trendlines] [*]

In Michoacan, La Familia [*]has used the media to try to align itself with the disenfranchised. After the recent attacks, one of its leaders, Servando Gómez, called a local television station and told viewers: "I want to say to all Michoacanans, we love them and respect them."

"Everyone here has known us since we were kids," said Gómez, who is known as "La Tuta." "We are with the people of Michoacan."

Carlos Heredia, a former Michoacan official who now works as an analyst at a Mexico City think tank, said the government's iron-fisted approach is a recipe for failure in regions where mistrust of the government is high.

"You don't have the hearts and minds of the local population," Heredia said. "And if the local drug lords play Robin Hood, then you are lost. Because the people are ultimately going to say, 'What do those officials in Mexico City care about us? They despise us. And these drug guys, at least they give us something.' "
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Rebels Obtained Arms Sold to Venezuela, Colombia Says

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28Colombia.html
July 28, 2009
Rebels Obtained Arms Sold to Venezuela, Colombia Says
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Colombia] [bogota] [Colombia-Venezuela relations] [improved over past few years but over the past 12-18 months a series of incidents with Colombia’s * seen leaning toward Washington while Venezuela is Venezula (Chavez)] [use psci350, 390-5] [if Hugo has allowed his government or, even groups that his government should have corralled, to transship armaments to FARC and others, this will go down badly] [*]
BOGOTÁ, Colombia (AP) — Sweden demanded an explanation on Monday of how Colombia’s largest rebel group managed to obtain Swedish-made antitank rocket launchers that had been sold to Venezuela years ago. [when Sweden demands an explanation, somebody has crossed a bright red line in all likelihood] [*]

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/americas/28Colombia.html
July 28, 2009
Rebels Obtained Arms Sold to Venezuela, Colombia Says
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS [Colombia] [bogota] [Colombia-Venezuela relations] [improved over past few years but over the past 12-18 months a series of incidents with Colombia’s * seen leaning toward Washington while Venezuela is Venezula (Chavez)] [use psci350, 390-5] [if Hugo has allowed his government or, even groups that his government should have corralled, to transship armaments to FARC and others, this will go down badly] [*]
BOGOTÁ, Colombia (AP) — Sweden demanded an explanation on Monday of how Colombia’s largest rebel group managed to obtain Swedish-made antitank rocket launchers that had been sold to Venezuela years ago. [when Sweden demands an explanation, somebody has crossed a bright red line in all likelihood] [*]

Colombia said over the weekend that its military had found the weapons in a captured rebel arms cache and that Sweden had recently confirmed that they had originally been sold to Venezuela’s military.

The confirmation strengthens Colombian accusations that the government of President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela has aided the leftist group, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC. It also exacerbated tensions between the two nations over an imminent agreement to expand the United States military’s use of Colombian air and naval bases. [and it gives Uribe a lot of cover for asking the US into the agreement that otherwise would have been frowned upon by many normal people in the region] [*]

The bazooka-like AT-4 single-use rocket launchers, manufactured by Saab Bofors Dynamics, lack the precision and range of surface-to-air weapons. There is also no evidence that FARC rebels have used the launchers in combat.

President Álvaro Uribe of Colombia said over the weekend that if Colombia had kept quiet about the weapons “they’ll fire them and obtain more and no one in the international community will halt their sale.”

Venezuela’s interior and justice minister, Tareck El Aissami, on Monday dismissed the report of the rocket launchers, denying that “our government or institutions have ever collaborated with any type of criminal or terrorist organizations.”

Venezuela’s foreign minister, Nicolás Maduro, called the claims part of a “brutal campaign” with a single objective: “to justify the presence of United States bases” in Colombia. [that sounds typical and extraordinarily defensive] [*]

He was referring to talks between Washington and Bogotá — another round is slated for early August — on the bases accord.

Neither official offered information on whether the launchers might have once belonged to Venezuela’s arsenal.

Three launchers were recovered in October in a FARC arms cache belonging to a rebel commander known as “Jhon 40.” In Stockholm, a senior Swedish Trade Ministry official, Jens Eriksson, said his government had been working with Colombia “to find out how this happened.”

“We have also contacted Venezuelan authorities,” he said. “We are still waiting for an answer.”
The head of the Swedish government agency that supervises weapons exports, Jan-Erik Lovgren, told Swedish Radio that the rocket launchers were sold to Venezuela in the 1980s. [oops] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

A Stolen Car Leaves Party in Germany at a Loss

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/europe/28germany.html
July 28, 2009
A Stolen Car Leaves Party in Germany at a Loss
By NICHOLAS KULISH [Germany] [Berlin] [EU3] [German politics] [incumbency corruptions like nearly everywhere else] [Germany’s ethos] [use psci350] [*]
BERLIN — Talk about car trouble.
Ulla Schmidt, the German health minister, had her chauffeur drive her armored Mercedes S-class official vehicle some 1,500 miles from Germany to Spain, where she is vacationing on the coast near Alicante. Voters back home probably never would have been the wiser had thieves not stolen the car, leaving Ms. Schmidt without a vehicle but with some explaining to do.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/europe/28germany.html
July 28, 2009
A Stolen Car Leaves Party in Germany at a Loss
By NICHOLAS KULISH [Germany] [Berlin] [EU3] [German politics] [incumbency corruptions like nearly everywhere else] [Germany’s ethos] [use psci350] [*]
BERLIN — Talk about car trouble.
Ulla Schmidt, the German health minister, had her chauffeur drive her armored Mercedes S-class official vehicle some 1,500 miles from Germany to Spain, where she is vacationing on the coast near Alicante. Voters back home probably never would have been the wiser had thieves not stolen the car, leaving Ms. Schmidt without a vehicle but with some explaining to do.

A leading taxpayers’ group pounced on Ms. Schmidt, a Social Democrat, [*]over the wasted money in driving the car halfway across Europe. The opposition Green Party immediately took issue with the pollution created by the drive.

“There is no scandal,” Ms. Schmidt told the newspaper Aachener Zeitung, adding that it was “more economical” to use her regular driver and car than to hire both in Spain.

Ms. Schmidt insisted that everything was handled correctly, or at least within the letter of the law, because she made several official visits during her vacation and paid out of her own pocket for private jaunts. But for the left-wing Social Democrats, whose dwindling hopes of winning the Sept. 27 election rest on convincing voters that, during these hard economic times, they are the party more in touch with the plight of the average person, a chauffeur scandal is anything but helpful. [sure, she sounds closely in touch with the common person] [*]

It was just the latest setback for the Social Democrats and Vice Chancellor Frank-Walter Steinmeier, their candidate to unseat Chancellor Angela Merkel in September.

In a week when party leaders planned to introduce Mr. Steinmeier’s campaign team and sharpen their election strategy, they instead were on the defensive, discussing in an emergency conference call on Monday the missing car and the ridicule they are facing.

Peter Lösche, emeritus professor of politics at the University of Göttingen, said, “Of course, their plans are messed up by the Ulla Schmidt debacle, which politically is not important, but for the climate of the campaign is very important.”

The Social Democrats are still reeling from the drubbing they took in June in the European Parliament election, where the party won just 21 percent of the votes, a dismal showing for one of Germany’s two major parties by any measure. They trail Mrs. Merkel’s Christian Democrats by 12 points in the latest polls. [*]

Over the weekend, a poll found that nearly 80 percent of Germans believe that Mrs. Merkel will be re-elected chancellor by the new Parliament. [this helps] [*]
“Steinmeier is the Adlai Stevenson of German politics right now, taking one for the team,” said Josef Joffe, the publisher of the weekly newspaper Die Zeit.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

South Africa: Thousands Strike for Wages, Crippling Services

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/africa/28briefs-Safrica.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | Africa
South Africa: Thousands Strike for Wages, Crippling Services
By REUTERS [South Africa] [Africa] [southern cone] [bottom of the world] [history of apartheid and all the rest] [hundreds of years of Germany-Dutch and some British colonialism] [followup] [*]
Thousands of South African public service workers seeking higher wages went on strike

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/africa/28briefs-Safrica.html
July 28, 2009
World Briefing | Africa
South Africa: Thousands Strike for Wages, Crippling Services
By REUTERS [South Africa] [Africa] [southern cone] [bottom of the world] [history of apartheid and all the rest] [hundreds of years of Germany-Dutch and some British colonialism] [followup] [*]
Thousands of South African public service workers seeking higher wages went on strike on Monday, crippling public services and piling political pressure on President Jacob Zuma. In actions seen by some as a show of muscle flexing, labor unions have called for increased social spending to cushion workers from the country’s first recession in 17 years. The strike by public transport workers, trash collectors and licensing officers, among others, came after days of violent protests by residents of poor townships who have complained about a lack of health care, water and electricity.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Scores Die as Sect Fights Nigeria Police

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29nigeria.html
July 29, 2009
Scores Die as Sect Fights Nigeria Police
By ADAM NOSSITER and SHARON OTTERMAN [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Security forces erected roadblocks and enforced curfews in towns across northern Nigeria on Tuesday after dozens of people were killed in two days of clashes between the police and members of a fundamentalist Islamic sect, [*]news services reported.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/africa/29nigeria.html
July 29, 2009
Scores Die as Sect Fights Nigeria Police
By ADAM NOSSITER and SHARON OTTERMAN [Nigeria] [Africa] [western, equatorial] [oil rigs and gangs kidnapping executives from oil companies for some time] [concomitantly, insurgency builds momentum] [followup] [another bad turn?] [*]
DAKAR, Senegal — Security forces erected roadblocks and enforced curfews in towns across northern Nigeria on Tuesday after dozens of people were killed in two days of clashes between the police and members of a fundamentalist Islamic sect, [*]news services reported.

The violence, which began Sunday and which news reports said had killed at least 80 people, has roiled a predominantly Muslim region of Nigeria that has had regular and often deadly outbreaks of sectarian unrest. The police blamed an obscure group, popularly known as Boko Haram, [*]which opposes Western education and demands the adoption of Islamic law in all of Nigeria, [that sounds far more militant in terms of Sharia than much of the insurgency in the past] [*] for the latest violence.

A senior member of the group, Abdulmuni Ibrahim Mohammed, told Reuters after his arrest in Kano State on Monday: “We do not believe in Western education. It corrupts our ideas and beliefs. That is why we are standing up to defend our religion.”

The Nigerian police said the group’s fighters attacked police stations in at least two states on Sunday and Monday. In one state, Bauchi, at least 39 militants were killed, a local police spokesman said; in another, Yobe, fighters used fuel-laden motorcycles to bomb a police station, and then, armed with bows and poison arrows, they attacked officers, [*]another police spokesman said.

Sporadic gunfire continued into Tuesday despite a curfew imposed in the northern city of Maiduguri, the capital of Borno Province, Reuters reported. On Monday, youths armed with machetes, knives, bows and arrows stormed police buildings and attacked police there, the news service reported.

The Associated Press quoted Ogbonnaya Onovo, the inspector general of police, as saying Monday that at least 55 people had died in the clashes — 50 militants and 5 police officers — but news reports, quoting witnesses, said the toll was higher.

Emmanuel Ojukwu, a spokesman for the national police, said that the violence had been largely quelled by late Monday, but that “a number of police officers from neighboring states” had been sent to “beef up” the forces in the affected areas.

This latest violence differs from the interreligious clashes that have periodically flared up in a region where Islamic law has been imposed, with mixed success, over the past decade. Hundreds were killed in mob violence involving Christians and Muslims in the town of Jos last November, [I vaguely recall] [*] for instance.

But in the new outbreak, militants appear to be taking aim at Nigerian police forces, apparently because they are seen as captives of “Western education,” as a police spokesman in Bauchi, [*]Mohammed Barau, said.

On Monday, Mr. Barau said the militants were “religious fundamentalists” who were “popularly known as Boko Haram,” a Hausa expression meaning “Western education is prohibited.” [*]Mr. Padah, in Yobe, used a different name for the militants, Yusufia. Mr. Ojukwu of the national police refused to assign a specific motive to the attacks, saying only that “they are elements who are not happy with the status quo or the peace of Nigeria.”

In Bauchi, 176 people were arrested after Sunday’s clashes in what was at least the second episode of religious violence in the state this year. In February, as many as 14 were killed in fighting between Christians and Muslims, and mosques and churches were burned. [it’s been ugly for some time but appears to be turning uglier] [*]
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Huge Profits Spell Doom for a 400-Acre Market

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/europe/28moscow.htm
July 28, 2009
Moscow Journal
Huge Profits Spell Doom for a 400-Acre Market
By ANDREW E. KRAMER [Russia] [former USSR] [Vlad and his proclivities represent a lot of Russians who don’t care for the way the world has changed since 1991] [in new assertive Russia] [Russia ethos] [use psci350] [use ir text] [Saakashvili’s mischief and the personal battle between Saakashvili and Putin] [Russia’s “Near Abroad” such as Georgia, Ukraine,] [Grandap Joe dabbling in Russia’s “Near Abroad”] [followup][*]
MOSCOW — Russia’s chief criminal investigator called it a “hell-hole” on the outskirts of Moscow.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/europe/28moscow.htm
July 28, 2009
Moscow Journal
Huge Profits Spell Doom for a 400-Acre Market
By ANDREW E. KRAMER [Russia] [former USSR] [Vlad and his proclivities represent a lot of Russians who don’t care for the way the world has changed since 1991] [in new assertive Russia] [Russia ethos] [use psci350] [use ir text] [Saakashvili’s mischief and the personal battle between Saakashvili and Putin] [Russia’s “Near Abroad” such as Georgia, Ukraine,] [Grandap Joe dabbling in Russia’s “Near Abroad”] [followup][*]
MOSCOW — Russia’s chief criminal investigator called it a “hell-hole” on the outskirts of Moscow.

For more than a decade, the Cherkizovsky outdoor market had been a warren of plywood shacks where horse meat and live turtles went on sale beside bales of counterfeit name-brand jeans from China in an explosion of raw commerce. [even back in the Soviet days there was a black market for Western Levis, Marboro ciggs, other icons of Western cosumerism] [*] So many migrant laborers worked there that unusual businesses sprang up to serve them, like a bank inside a shipping container and a Tajik consular office right in the market.

Before the market was finally closed late last month, the authorities said that one in every 40 traders had an infectious disease like tuberculosis or syphilis. Yet the real reason may have been that the market — and its owner — ran afoul of Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin’s vision of the new Russia. [everything can be made into a commodity if there’s a demand, no?] [*]

The market’s closing hints at the workings of power and wealth in today’s Russia, as the country lurches away from the coarser forms of capitalism that existed in the immediate post-Soviet period. That system is being replaced by a new form of state control over business under Mr. Putin, one based on codes of personal loyalty and fealty to ideals of a sterner, more dignified Russia than what existed in the 1990s.

The trouble in this case was that the market’s owner, Telman Ismailov, who had made billions of dollars as Cherkizovsky evolved from a mere flea market into an industrial-scale distribution hub for Chinese imports during the oil boom, had violated unwritten codes of business conduct that put him at odds with Mr. Putin, [that’s one guy you don’t want to be crosswise with] [*] according to analysts and Russian news reports.

The market was closed with a flurry of citations of fire code and health violations not unlike the use of environmental allegations to force Royal Dutch Shell to sell a portion of its investment in a Siberian oil field two years ago, or the shutdown of the Yukos oil company with tax claims before that. The market closing came as the Kremlin shut casinos in Moscow and other major cities to prevent vice, also at the urging of Mr. Putin.

While it surely dented the business empire of Mr. Ismailov, the closing of the Cherkizovsky market also put an estimated 100,000 migrant laborers out of work, dispersed Russia’s largest Chinatown and broke up a major distribution system for durable goods imports.

“Of course, if you applied the official hygiene, fire and labor codes, it was not done the way it was written,” Arseny Popov, an authority on the Chinese diaspora in Russia with the Russian Academy of Sciences, said of the market’s operations. “But nothing was happening there that wasn’t happening for the past 15 years.”

What was new was Mr. Ismailov’s $1.4 billion investment, using proceeds from the market, into a glittering, five-star resort thousands of miles away in a seemingly unrelated world of luxury on the Turkish seaside. It was called Mardan Palace, after Mr. Ismailov’s father, with 560 rooms, 10 restaurants, 17 bars and a lake-size swimming pool. [*]

Mr. Ismailov, an immigrant from Azerbaijan who survived the sharp-elbowed world of street capitalism in the early 1990s to create the Cherkizovsky empire, threw a lavish series of opening parties in May. Mariah Carey was hired to perform a set and sing “Dreamlover” for Mr. Ismailov and his guests. Monica Bellucci, Sharon Stone and Paris Hilton also attended, the resort’s publicist said. The mayor of Moscow, Yuri M. Luzhkov, cut the ribbon.

It is unclear what about the lavish resort may have set off the regulatory onslaught. The ostentation in time of economic crisis, the investment abroad of profits made in Russia and a move to undermine Mr. Luzhkov, a one-time rival of Mr. Putin’s, have all been suggested in the Russian press. [*] Mr. Ismailov declined to be interviewed about his market’s closing.

But within a week of the Mardan Palace party, the case had reached the ultimate arbiter of the business affairs and lifestyle of the Russian rich: Mr. Putin.

The prime minister broached the matter at a cabinet meeting June 1, leaving little doubt what he had in mind. “The fight is on, but results are few,” Mr Putin said, referring to smuggled goods at the market, according to news reports. “The results in such cases are prison terms. Where are the prison terms?” [*]

Government agencies quickly took up the theme of the market’s seedy side — which was hard to deny. The powerful director of the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor’s office, Aleksander Bastrykin, called the market a “hell-hole” that had become a “a state within a state” on the edge of Moscow. “It has its own police, its own customs service, its own courts, its own prosecutor and stand-alone infrastructure, including brothels,” [my kind of redoubt] [*] he said.

It was also a workplace for about 50,000 Chinese immigrants and had coalesced [it’s fascinating how a Chinatown emerges in every corner of the world no matter what the local customs are] [*] into a center of northeastern Chinese culture, according to Mr. Popov, the Chinese expert at the Russian Academy of Sciences. The other main ethnic groups were Azerbaijanis, Tajiks, Vietnamese and smaller numbers of Afghans and North Koreans. In all, the Russian Federation of Migrants, a nonprofit group, estimated that 100,000 people worked there.

Thousands also lived there. Most of the population of 18,000 Tajik porters, for example, slept in basement rooms of an abandoned sports stadium and in shipping containers, said Karomat B. Sharipov, the chief of a nonprofit group called Tajik Migrant Labor. Outbreaks of tuberculosis were common, the worst occurring in 2006.

Around the market fence last week, hundreds of migrants loitered on the sidewalks, smoking or chewing sesame seeds. About a hundred Chinese and Vietnamese traders had attempted to block traffic on a Moscow highway; they were quickly broken up by the police and 24 Vietnamese were deported. China has sent a deputy commerce minister to Moscow to protest the treatment of its citizens. [*]

Mostly, the laborers can do nothing. Bakhodur M. Mirzoyev, a Tajik, squatted outside the market on a recent afternoon. He has been living in Kazan Train Station. “Dear Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin, open our containers,” he said. “We want to work.”

Asked why the market closed, Mr. Mirzoyev shrugged. The owner, he said, had built a hotel in Turkey. Now he was left with nothing but “three hungry children in Dushanbe.”

Inside the fence, the market that covered 400 acres, or about half the size of Central Park, was abandoned.

Plastic bags blew in the breeze, flies buzzed and sampled spilled dog food, and the sour smell of rotting meat wafted out. At one spot, frontloaders were smashing stalls into piles of dry wall and broken glass. A sign still hung on in one place: “cigarettes, wholesale and retail.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Another Rift Between Greece, Macedonia

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702653.html
Another Rift Between Greece, Macedonia
Both Lay Claim to Alexander the Great
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Greece] [Europe] [EU, 27-member regime] [when we were in Greece in 2006, everything was denominated in Euro] [the historic trouble over Megus Alexandre] [for many years (decades as far as I remember) Greece has been rather touchy over Macedonia] [they have gone after others for using the name, etc] [nationalism largely but it goes a bit beyond basic nationalism to an obsession of sorts] [followup] [use psci350, 355] [*]
SKOPJE, Macedonia -- Alexander the Great died more than 2,300 years ago. But his cult of personality is just starting to grip this tiny Balkan country. [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702653.html
Another Rift Between Greece, Macedonia
Both Lay Claim to Alexander the Great
By Craig Whitlock
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Greece] [Europe] [EU, 27-member regime] [when we were in Greece in 2006, everything was denominated in Euro] [the historic trouble over Megus Alexandre] [for many years (decades as far as I remember) Greece has been rather touchy over Macedonia] [they have gone after others for using the name, etc] [nationalism largely but it goes a bit beyond basic nationalism to an obsession of sorts] [followup] [use psci350, 355] [*]
SKOPJE, Macedonia -- Alexander the Great died more than 2,300 years ago. But his cult of personality is just starting to grip this tiny Balkan country. [*]

To the annoyance of next-door Greece, which has long claimed the conqueror as its own, Macedonia has anointed Alexander its national hero. The government has renamed the international airport here in his honor, as well as the main highway to Greece. [*]Soon to come: a 72-foot-tall marble colossus of Alexander astride his favorite warhorse, Bucephalus, which will dominate the skyline of the capital, Skopje.

The mania over Alexander is the latest chapter in a long-running feud between Macedonia and Greece that some officials fear has the potential to destabilize a region still trying to recover from the Balkan wars of the 1990s. [*]

The dispute centers on a basic question: Does Macedonia, a country born out of the rubble of the former Yugoslavia, have the right to call itself what it wants? For 18 years, the conflict has defied attempts by the United States, the United Nations and European powers to find a solution. [Macedonia called itself that even when Yugoslavia was in tact] [I remember flareups from time to time with between Yugoslavia and Greece over who owned the name and rememberances] [*]

The Greek government refuses to recognize its neighbor's constitutional name, the Republic of Macedonia, which it sees as a thinly veiled bid to lay claim to three of its northern districts, a region known as Greek Macedonia. [*]After Macedonia declared independence in 1991, Greece prevented it from joining the United Nations and imposed an economic blockade that nearly strangled the fledgling country.

Greece also vetoed Macedonia's bid to join NATO last year and is blocking its admission to the European Union until it changes its name to the Republic of Skopje, [*] the Slavic Republic of Macedonia or something similar.

Macedonian officials said they cannot understand why Greece sees their country's name as a threat or thinks they have a secret plan to annex northern Greece.

"It's laughable," said Foreign Minister Antonio Milososki, noting that the Macedonian military consists of 8,000 troops and a fleet of eight helicopters. "In America, you have a good phrase to describe a confusing situation. You say, 'It's all Greek to me.' Sometimes we say it's all Greek to us as well." [*]

Greeks complain that the Republic of Macedonia is challenging their national identity and stealing their history. Alexander, the ruler of the ancient kingdom of Macedonia, was born in the city of Pella, located in present-day Greece. [*]The Athens government says there is no question that he was Greek. The Republic of Macedonia, it says, consists of Slavs and other outsiders who invaded the region a millennium after Alexander died. [*] [remember the Byzantiums!?]

"This practice is bothering Greece a lot," said Greek Deputy Foreign Minister Yannis Valinakis. "It demonstrates Skopje's lack of goodwill and respect."

Under a truce brokered in 1995 by former U.S. secretary of state Cyrus Vance, Macedonia was allowed to join the United Nations on the Greek condition that it refer to itself in multinational institutions as the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, or FYROM. [this is actually on maps including my geography module] [*] It was also required to change its flag and rewrite its constitution to include a promise never to violate Greek territory or interfere in Greece's internal affairs.

Macedonians hate the FYROM label, which is a reminder of communist times. Although the government has persuaded more than 120 countries, including the United States, to recognize it as the Republic of Macedonia, it is still forced to go by FYROM at the United Nations. [*]

Officials in Skopje said that they were willing to swallow FYROM again as the price of admission to NATO last year but that Greece refused. Matthew Nimetz, the U.N.'s special envoy for the dispute, said recently he was optimistic a compromise could be reached but gave no details.

Leaders in Macedonia, a poor, landlocked country about the size of New Hampshire, warned they may have trouble holding the nation together if Greece does not relent soon.[*] Internal unrest, they said, could easily spread to other fragile nations in the Balkans, such as neighboring Kosovo, where 1,500 U.S. troops serve as part of a peacekeeping force.

"The problem is threatening the fabric of our society," Gjorge Ivanov, the president of Macedonia, said in an interview. "The pressure that Greece is making is destabilizing the whole region."

In the Balkans, it doesn't take much for conflicts to spin out of control. [that’s for damn sure] [I remember driving from Dubrovnik to another small seaside village with several churches; several of the tile roofs had new tile and I asked about it to our guide; she explained the Serbs (and I remember here pointing to the foothills running rougly adjacent to the sea coast along the Dalmatian coast) and explaining how in 1991 the Serbs came from the other side of the mountains pounding the area with artillery!] [it was incredible and she was sober, yet emotion tinger her voice] [*] Macedonia almost descended into civil war in 2001 because of fighting between ethnic Albanians, who are Muslim and constitute a quarter of the population, and ethnic Macedonians, who are Orthodox Christian.

Since then, the two groups have shared power under a peace agreement based on the assumption that Macedonia would join NATO. Both sides see the military alliance as a guarantee of internal stability. "It would give us medicine for our hot heads," said Menduh Tachi, leader of the opposition Democratic Party of Albanians.

But Tachi said the pact could be derailed if the dispute over the country's name persists much longer. "I don't even want to think of what would happen if we can't resolve it and join NATO," he said. "It would be a Frankenstein scenario."

Macedonians say the name of the country is crucial to developing their still wobbly national identity. Ethnic Albanians say they would revolt if the Slavic Republic of Macedonia was the new name because they are not Slavs. Almost nobody wants another Greek-preferred version, the Republic of Skopje, which ignores everyone outside the capital. [*]

Historically, territory inhabited by ethnic Macedonians has belonged to other nations: Greece, Bulgaria and Serbia. Those countries have been reluctant to recognize ethnic Macedonians as a separate people, to recognize their Slavic language as a distinct tongue or even to recognize the Macedonian Orthodox Church. [*]

Todor Petrov, president of the World Macedonian Congress, a group founded by Macedonian exiles in 1899, said the country should stop kowtowing to Greece and just call itself the Republic of Macedonia, regardless of how badly it wants to join NATO or the European Union.

In an interview, he accused Greece of "practicing ethnic cleansing and genocide on the Macedonian nation" for the past 100 years. "They're denying our nationality and culture and church and history and our borders," [ouch] [this is probably precisely the time some seasoned diplomats would be useful] [*] he said.

It is not just Macedonia's national identity that is at stake. The Greek government does not recognize ethnic minorities within its own borders, including Macedonian-speaking residents of northern Greece. [*]

Pavle Voskopoulos, a Greek citizen who leads the Rainbow Party, a group of ethnic Macedonians in northern Greece, said the country subscribes to a myth of a "pure" Greek people who are directly descended from Alexander and others from his era. "This is all about modern Greek identity," he said. "If there is a Macedonia as an independent state, this is a great threat against Greek policy and Greek ideology." [*] [I imagine many Greeks simply feel under siege from Turks and various Slavs] [they certainly agonize over it all a lot] [*]

Lacking the clout to force Greece to budge, Macedonia has intensified its glorification of Alexander and other ancient heroes, a campaign that critics in Skopje deride as "antiquization."

The country has renamed its national stadium for King Philip II, Alexander's father, and organized dozens of archaeological digs. Officials also like to needle Greeks that the philosopher Aristotle, who tutored the teenage Alexander, was from the kingdom of Macedonia, not Athens.

Pasko Kuzman, the government's director of cultural heritage, is a driving force behind Macedonia's surge of interest in the past. With flowing white hair, three heavy-duty watches strapped to his thick wrists and a National Geographic fanny pack, he has been described as a cross between Indiana Jones and Santa Claus.

In an interview in his office, sitting next to a wall-size copy of a 13th-century icon of Alexander, Kuzman insisted that Greece had stolen the conqueror's legacy from Macedonia, not the other way around.
"The Greeks are sorry that they are called Greece and not Macedonia," he said. "What else can I tell you?" [ooh—that stings] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Nonmilitary Actions Can Deter Iran, Gates Says

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701604.html
Nonmilitary Actions Can Deter Iran, Gates Says
Barak Expresses Israeli Skepticism
By Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Israel] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [Israel embroiled in its own internal dynamics where the US is resented among many while lauded among others] [West Bank mess that gets potentially messier by the week-month-year] [what Goldberg has called (correctly in my view) Israel’s settlement addiction] [SecDef Gates visited –Iraq after his trip to Israel] [cross in govt] [psci355] [*]
JERUSALEM, July 27-- Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates on Monday stressed engagement and economic sanctions to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, prompting his Israeli counterpart to insist that "no options" should be ruled out if diplomacy fails. [*] [the complications that arise when allies tell others how to behave] [the basic issue: telling somebody else what constitutes their security interests] [and it goes both ways but we in the US tend not to think of it when we’re telling Israel what its interests are!] [and potentially most troublesome of all and perhaps least witting, neoconservatives-Christian Zionists-other religion-related groups (or at least at one time connections between the groups and religions were important) who aruge mostly Likud lines thinking they surely know what’s best for Israel since they agree with Israel’s rightwing but they to are telling Israelis what Israeli security interests are!] [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072701604.html
Nonmilitary Actions Can Deter Iran, Gates Says
Barak Expresses Israeli Skepticism
By Greg Jaffe
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Israel] [domestic politics intersects foreign policy] [Israel embroiled in its own internal dynamics where the US is resented among many while lauded among others] [West Bank mess that gets potentially messier by the week-month-year] [what Goldberg has called (correctly in my view) Israel’s settlement addiction] [SecDef Gates visited –Iraq after his trip to Israel] [cross in govt] [psci355] [*]
JERUSALEM, July 27-- Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates on Monday stressed engagement and economic sanctions to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon, prompting his Israeli counterpart to insist that "no options" should be ruled out if diplomacy fails. [*] [the complications that arise when allies tell others how to behave] [the basic issue: telling somebody else what constitutes their security interests] [and it goes both ways but we in the US tend not to think of it when we’re telling Israel what its interests are!] [and potentially most troublesome of all and perhaps least witting, neoconservatives-Christian Zionists-other religion-related groups (or at least at one time connections between the groups and religions were important) who aruge mostly Likud lines thinking they surely know what’s best for Israel since they agree with Israel’s rightwing but they to are telling Israelis what Israeli security interests are!] [*]

Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, in a short news conference with Gates, who was visiting here, twice raised the possibility that military action might be needed to stop Iran's nuclear program.

"We clearly believe that no options should be removed from the table," Barak said. "This is our policy. We mean it. We recommend others to take the same position, but we do not dictate to anyone." [Barak is too smart and too experienced to fall into the trap just noted] [*]

Gates steered clear of any talk of military options. Although the Obama administration has not ruled out using military force against Tehran, it has focused most of its attention on drawing the Iranians into talks over their nuclear program and convincing them that developing a nuclear bomb is not in their best interest. Gates said the administration hopes to have by the fall an initial response from Iran regarding its entreaties.

If the talks fail, he said, stiff international economic sanctions on Tehran would be in order.

"I think we're in full agreement [with Israel] on the negative consequences of Iran obtaining this kind of capability," Gates said. "I think we are also agreed that it is important to take every opportunity to try and persuade the Iranians to reconsider what is actually in their own security interest." [*]

The Israelis haven't outwardly, or in private, opposed talks between the United States and Iran, U.S. defense officials said. But Barak's remarks made it clear the Israelis remain deeply skeptical that any engagement will dissuade Iran from its nuclear ambitions. [*] [and aping to explain to the administration (which many in the Israeli right think is too naïve) why it must see things the way Israel’s right sees things] [in fairness, virtually every group does the same thing] [it’s just that Likud (and Likud rightward politically) are incredibly arrogant in their position] [they can’t even concede they may be wrong] [*]

Despite the outward differences in tone, both Gates and Barak stressed that the opening for engagement with Iran is limited. "If there is an engagement, we believe it should be short in time, well defined in objectives, followed by sanctions," Barak said.

Gates also warned that Iran would not be allowed to use the cover of engagement to "run out the clock" while it continues to make progress in the nuclear program.

The half-day trip to Israel marked Gates's second visit to the Jewish state as defense secretary. From the outset of his tenure as Pentagon chief, Gates has stressed that any strike by the United States or Israel on Iran would profoundly destabilize the Middle East. He has also said repeatedly that an Iranian nuclear weapon would provoke an arms race in the region that would be very damaging. [I like Gates quite a lot] [now I argued in his behalf before Obama selected him and I was elated when he replaced Rummy] [but I still think much of my positive views of him are independent of those considerations] [in other words, I think objectively he’s done a rather good job] [although with 4-years of Rummy, there was little room to go down] [*]
Iran denies trying to develop a nuclear weapon, saying it is trying to develop nuclear reactors for generating domestic power.
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

U.S. Defense Chief Visits Iraq

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29military.html
July 29, 2009
U.S. Defense Chief Visits Iraq
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [ “surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [Maliki’s imminet visit to the US and what either side desires?] [tensions …] [SecDef Gates visited –Iraq after his trip to Israel] [cross in govt] [psci355] [*]
TALIL AIRBASE, Iraq — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates arrived here this morning to meet with American military commanders and Iraqi political leaders in anticipation of a major drawdown of United States troops set to start early next year.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/29/world/middleeast/29military.html
July 29, 2009
U.S. Defense Chief Visits Iraq
By ELISABETH BUMILLER [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [ “surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [Maliki’s imminet visit to the US and what either side desires?] [tensions …] [SecDef Gates visited –Iraq after his trip to Israel] [cross in govt] [psci355] [*]
TALIL AIRBASE, Iraq — Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates arrived here this morning to meet with American military commanders and Iraqi political leaders in anticipation of a major drawdown of United States troops set to start early next year.

Mr. Gates, who is to see Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki of Iraq as well as Gen. Ray Odierno, the top American commander here, is on his first trip to Iraq this year. [*]

Defense officials said that a main purpose of Mr. Gates’s visit was to begin preparations with the Iraqis for the withdrawal of some 80,000 American troops, who are set to leave Iraq between March and August 2010. There are currently about 130,000 American troops in Iraq. Defense officials anticipate leaving behind a “residual force” of some 50,000 troops by the end of next summer. [*]Under an agreement with the Iraqis, all United States troops are to be out of Iraq by 2011.

Mr. Gates’s talks with Iraqi leaders are expected to focus on what kind of assistance the United States will provide to the Iraqi security forces after 2011, including whether the United States will sell Iraq any F-16 fighter jets. Iraq has expressed an interest in the jets, and Pentagon officials say they are inclined to say yes, although Congress would have to approve a final sale. [end-user agreements, etc] [*]

“We’ve said that we think it’s a good idea that if they go with a multi-role fighter, that it be ours,” a Defense Department official told reporters before Mr. Gates’s trip. The official declined to be identified under ground rules imposed by the Pentagon.

The official said that it was still too soon to know how many fighter jets Iraq would need, or, for that matter, could afford.

“You don’t stand up an advanced air force overnight,” the official said. “And nobody thinks that by the end of 2011 Iraq’s going to have squadrons of advanced fighters and trained pilots and everything else.” [*]In addition, “they may have set their initial set of priorities when oil was at $140 a barrel; now that it’s at $60 a barrel, they’re having to tighten their waistband like everything else.”

In Talil, near Nasiriya in southern Iraq, Mr. Gates is expected to meet with troops and see what the Pentagon is calling its first advisory and assistance brigade — in essence a combat brigade of some 3,000 to 5,000 soldiers with more officers, sergeants and personnel members to train the Iraqis.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

In Battle, Hunches Prove to Be Valuable

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/health/research/28brain.html
July 28, 2009
Brain Power
In Battle, Hunches Prove to Be Valuable
By BENEDICT CAREY [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [ “surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [Maliki’s imminet visit to the US and what either side desires?] [percolating tensions …] [this is general stuff on US troops intuition and other intangibles that make US power difficult to quantify] [use psci350, 355] [*]
The sight was not that unusual, at least not for Mosul, Iraq, on a summer morning: a car parked on the sidewalk, facing opposite traffic, its windows rolled up tight. Two young boys stared out the back window, kindergarten age maybe, their faces leaning together as if to share a whisper.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/health/research/28brain.html
July 28, 2009
Brain Power
In Battle, Hunches Prove to Be Valuable
By BENEDICT CAREY [-ir] [hydra] [insurgency] [renewed sectarian tensions and fault lines] [ “surge”] [clearly, positive indicators that surge worked-working] [nevertheless, incrementally increased violence while surge unfolded-unfolds] [followup] [iwhat appears to be more sectarian scabb-ripping] [with hope of sectarian re-ignition?] [followup] [Maliki’s imminet visit to the US and what either side desires?] [percolating tensions …] [this is general stuff on US troops intuition and other intangibles that make US power difficult to quantify] [use psci350, 355] [*]
The sight was not that unusual, at least not for Mosul, Iraq, on a summer morning: a car parked on the sidewalk, facing opposite traffic, its windows rolled up tight. Two young boys stared out the back window, kindergarten age maybe, their faces leaning together as if to share a whisper.

The soldier patrolling closest to the car stopped. It had to be hot in there; it was 120 degrees outside. “Permission to approach, sir, to give them some water,” the soldier said to Sgt. First Class Edward Tierney, who led the nine-man patrol that morning.

“I said no — no,” Sergeant Tierney said in a telephone interview from Afghanistan. He said he had an urge to move back before he knew why: “My body suddenly got cooler; you know, that danger feeling.” [*]

The United States military has spent billions on hardware, like signal jamming technology, to detect and destroy what the military calls improvised explosive devices, or I.E.D.’s, the roadside bombs that have proved to be the greatest threat in Iraq and now in Afghanistan, where Sergeant Tierney is training soldiers to foil bomb attacks.

Still, high-tech gear, while helping to reduce casualties, remains a mere supplement to the most sensitive detection system of all — the human brain. Troops on the ground, using only their senses and experience, are responsible for foiling many I.E.D. [it didn’t look right] [it’s that weird feeling that’s indescribable but often spot on] [on other hand, you sometimes sense it simply because you’re sared and/or tired] [*] attacks, and, like Sergeant Tierney, they often cite a gut feeling or a hunch as their first clue.

Everyone has hunches — about friends’ motives, about the stock market, about when to fold a hand of poker and when to hold it. [*]But United States troops are now at the center of a large effort to understand how it is that in a life-or-death situation, some people’s brains can sense danger and act on it well before others’ do.

Experience matters, of course: if you have seen something before, you are more likely to anticipate it the next time. And yet, recent research suggests that something else is at work, too.

Small differences in how the brain processes images, how well it reads emotions and how it manages surges in stress hormones help explain why some people sense imminent danger before most others do. [*]

Studies of members of the Army Green Berets and Navy Seals, for example, have found that in threatening situations they experience about the same rush of the stress hormone cortisol as any other soldier does. But their levels typically drop off faster than less well-trained troops, much faster in some cases. [I don’t know how they simulated real danger situations to measure this?] [*]

In the past two years, an Army researcher, Steven Burnett, has overseen a study into human perception and bomb detection involving about 800 military men and women. [*]Researchers have conducted exhaustive interviews with experienced fighters. They have administered personality tests and measured depth perception, vigilance and related abilities. The troops have competed to find bombs in photographs, videos, virtual reality simulations and on the ground in mock exercises.

The study complements a growing body of work suggesting that the speed with which the brain reads and interprets sensations like the feelings in one’s own body and emotions in the body language of others is central to avoiding imminent threats. [the system in generalized form is called the fight-or-flight response system] [*]

“Not long ago people thought of emotions as old stuff, as just feelings — feelings that had little to do with rational decision making, or that got in the way of it,” said Dr. Antonio Damasio, director of the Brain and Creativity Institute at the University of Southern California. “Now that position has reversed. We understand emotions as practical action programs that work to solve a problem, often before we’re conscious of it. These processes are at work continually, in pilots, leaders of expeditions, parents, all of us.”
Seeing What Others Miss
The patrol through Mosul’s main marketplace never became routine, not once, not after the 10th time or the 40th. A divot in the gravel, a slight shadow in a ditch, a pile of discarded cans; any one could be deadly; every one raised the same question: Is there something — anything — out of place here? [cigarette butts pile in an area that suggest a lookout was watching from there; and any hundreds of other little things that troops learn from being in the shit tall weeds] [*]

Clearing a road of bombs is one of the least glamorous and most dangerous jobs on the planet. It is also one of the most important. In May, coalition forces found 465 of them in Afghanistan and 333 in Iraq. The troops foiled more than half the traps over all — but about 10 percent of the bombs killed or maimed a soldier or a Marine.

“We had indicators we’d look for, but you’d really have to be aware of everything, every detail,” said Sergeant Tierney, whose unit was working with the Iraqi police in that summer of 2004.

In recent years, the bombs have become more powerful, the hiding places ever more devious. Bombs in fake rocks. Bombs in poured concrete, built into curbs. Bombs triggered by decoy bombs.

“On one route sweep mission, there was a noticeable I.E.D. in the middle of the road, but it was a decoy,” said Lt. Donovan Campbell, who in 2004 led a Marine platoon for seven months of heavy fighting in Ramadi and wrote a vivid book, “Joker One,” about the experience. “The real bomb was encased in concrete, a hundred meters away, in the midst of rubble. One of my Marines spotted it. He said, ‘That block looks too symmetrical, too perfect.’ ”

Lieutenant Campbell had the area cleared and the bomb destroyed.

“Unless you know what rubble in that part of Iraq looks like, there’s no way you’d see that,” he said. “I had two guys, one we called Hound Dog, who were really good at spotting things that didn’t fit.”

The men and women who performed best in the Army’s I.E.D. detection study had the sort of knowledge gained through experience, according to a preliminary analysis of the results; but many also had superb depth perception and a keen ability to sustain intense focus for long periods. [*]The ability to pick odd shapes masked in complex backgrounds — a “Where’s Waldo” type of skill that some call anomaly detection — also predicted performance on some of the roadside bomb simulations.

“Some of these things cannot be trained, obviously,” said Jennifer Murphy, a psychologist at the Army Research Institute and the principal author of the I.E.D. study. “But some may be; these are fighters who become very sensitive to small changes in the environment. They’ll clear the same road every day and notice ridiculously subtle things: this rock was not here yesterday.”

In a study that appeared last month, neuroscientists at Princeton University demonstrated just how sensitive this visual ability is — and how a gut feeling may arise before a person becomes conscious of what the brain has registered. [*] [sounds [pretty cool actually] [*]

They had students try to pick out figures — people or cars — in a series of photos that flashed by on a computer screen. The pictures flashed by four at a time, and the participants were told to scan only two of them, either those above and below the center point, or those to the left and right. Eye-tracking confirmed that they did just that.

But brain scans showed that the students’ brains registered the presence of people or cars even when the figures appeared in photos that they were not paying attention to. They got better at it, too, with training.

Some people’s brains were almost twice as fast at detecting the figures as others’. “It appears that the brain primes the whole visual system to be strongly sensitive to categories of visual input,” kinds of things to look for, said Marius V. Peelen, a neuroscientist at Princeton and a co-author of the study with Li Fei-Fei and Sabine Kastner. “And apparently some people’s visual system processes things much faster than others’.”
Something in the Air
A soldier or Marine could have X-ray vision and never see most I.E.D.’s, however. Veterans say that those who are most sensitive to the presence of the bombs not only pick up small details but also have the ability to step back and observe the bigger picture: extra tension in the air, unusual rhythms in Iraqi daily life, oddities in behavior. [*]

“One afternoon I remember turning down a road in Baghdad we were very familiar with, and there’s no one out — very creepy for that time of day,” said Sgt. Don Gomez, a spokesman for the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America, who took part in the invasion and later, in 2005, drove a general in and around Baghdad.

Trash was heaped in a spot along the street where Sergeant Gomez and other drivers in the convoy had not seen it before, so they gave it a wide berth.

“We later called it in to an explosives team and, sure enough, they found one and detonated it — the thing left a huge crater,” he said.

As the brain tallies cues, big and small, consciously and not, it may send out an alarm before a person fully understands why. [*]

In a landmark experiment in 1997, researchers at the University of Iowa had people gamble on a simple card game. Each participant was spotted $2,000 and had to choose cards from any of four decks. The cards offered immediate rewards, of $50 or $100, and the occasional card carried a penalty. But the game was rigged: the penalties in two of the decks were modest and in the other two decks were large. [interesting set up—the simulation with card game rewards and negative rewards] [I imagine it simulates to some extent] [you’re always going to wonder about validity: is it actually measuring what you think it is or something entirely different that you haven’t even thought of??][*]

The pattern was unpredictable, but on average the players reported “liking” some decks better than others by the 50th card to the 80th card drawn before they could fully explain why. [*]Their bodies usually tensed up — subtly, but significantly, according to careful measures of sweat — in a few people as early as about the 10th card drawn, according to the authors, Dr. Damasio; his wife, Dr. Hanna Damasio; Dr. Antoine Bechara; and Dr. Daniel Tranel.

In a study published in May, researchers at King’s College in London did brain scans of people playing the gambling game used in the University of Iowa study. Several brain regions were particularly active, including the orbitofrontal cortex, which is involved in decision making, and the insula, where the brain is thought to register the diverse sensations coming from around the body and interpret them as a cohesive feeling — that cooling sensation of danger.[*] In some brains, the alarm appears to sound earlier, and perhaps more intensely, than average.

Gut feelings about potential threats or opportunities are not always correct, and neuroscientists debate the conditions under which the feeling precedes the conscious awareness of the clues themselves. But the system evolved for survival, and, in some people, is apparently exquisitely sensitive, [*]the findings suggest.
Mastering the Fear
One thing did not quite fit on the morning of Sergeant Tierney’s patrol in Mosul. The nine soldiers left the police station around 9 a.m., but they did not get their usual greeting. No one shot at them or fired a rocket-propelled grenade. Minutes passed, and nothing. [and some began to feel that weird sensation that comes over a person—why is this happening this way? Why do I not like the way this is unfolding? Why am I getting a creeped out feeling? Why am I angrier at these people today than I normally am?] [*]

The soldiers walked the road in an odd silence, scanning the landscape for evidence of I.E.D.’s and trying to stay alert for an attack from insurgents. In war, anxiety can run as high as the Iraqi heat, and neuroscientists say that the most perceptive, observant brain on earth will not pick up subtle clues if it is overwhelmed by stress.

In the Army study of I.E.D. detection, researchers found that troops who were good at spotting bombs in simulations tended to think of themselves as predators, not prey. That frame of mind by itself may work to reduce anxiety, experts say.

The brains of elite troops also appear to register perceived threats in a different way from the average enlistee, [*]said Dr. Martin P. Paulus, a psychiatrist at the University of California, San Diego, and the V.A. San Diego Healthcare System. At the sight of angry faces, members of the Navy Seals show significantly higher activation in the insula than regular soldiers, [wow, other-wordly perception] [*] according to a just-completed study.

“The big question is whether these differences perceiving threat are natural, or due to training,” Dr. Paulus said.

That morning in Mosul, Sergeant Tierney gave the command to fall back. The soldier who had asked to approach the car had just time enough to turn before the bomb exploded. Shrapnel clawed the side of his face; the shock wave threw the others to the ground. The two young boys were gone: killed in the blast, almost certainly, he said.

Since then, Sergeant Tierney has often run back the tape in his head, looking for the detail that tipped him off. Maybe it was the angle of the car, or the location; maybe the absence of an attack, the sleepiness in the market: perhaps the sum of all of the above.

“I can’t point to one thing,” he said. “I just had that feeling you have when you walk out of the house and know you forgot something — you got your keys, it’s not that — and need a few moments to figure out what it is.”
He added, “I feel very fortunate none of my men were killed or badly wounded.”

Strong Words From Iran’s Opposition

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/middleeast/28iran.html
July 28, 2009
Strong Words From Iran’s Opposition
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [trouble at UN and Ahmadinejad not happy with his master?] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Iranian opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi spoke out more strongly than ever before on Monday against the arrests and killings of protesters, hours before Iran’s supreme leader ordered the closing of a “nonstandard”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/middleeast/28iran.html
July 28, 2009
Strong Words From Iran’s Opposition
By ROBERT F. WORTH and NAZILA FATHI [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [trouble at UN and Ahmadinejad not happy with his master?] [*]
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Iranian opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi spoke out more strongly than ever before on Monday against the arrests and killings of protesters, hours before Iran’s supreme leader ordered the closing of a “nonstandard” prison apparently in an effort to deflect rising criticism over the issue.

“How can it be that the leaders of our country do not cry out and shed tears about these tragedies?” Mr. Moussavi said, in comments to a teachers’ association that were posted on his Web site. “Can they not see it, feel it? These things are blackening our country, blackening all our hearts. If we remain silent, it will destroy us all and take us to hell.”

Mr. Moussavi’s angry tone appeared to reflect the steadily rising toll of those killed — some after being beaten in prison — in the crackdown that followed the disputed June 12 presidential election. A funeral was held in Tehran on Monday for Amir Javadi-Far, a student activist who died in prison after being arrested, and reports emerged of still more deaths.

Mr. Moussavi and other opposition leaders have asked permission to hold a public mourning ceremony for the dead on Thursday. That day has great symbolic importance, because it is 40 days after the shooting of Neda Agha-Soltan, the young woman whose death ignited widespread outrage in Iran and beyond.

Commemorating the 40th day after a person’s death is an important mourning ritual in Shiite Islam; similar anniversaries for dead protesters were essential in the demonstrations that led to the Islamic Revolution in 1979.

Mr. Moussavi and other opposition figures have called for the hundreds of remaining detainees to be released, and there were signs Monday that the government was feeling pressure on the issue. The secretary of Iran’s National Security Council said that the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had taken steps to prevent abuses, including closing a “nonstandard” prison, the state-run Press TV reported. He did not identify the prison further.

“In the course of recent events, the leader has ordered officials (to take measures) so that no one, God forbid, suffers injustice,” said Saeed Jalili, the secretary of the National Security Council, Press TV reported.

A spokesman for Iran’s judiciary said Monday that the judiciary chief, Ayatollah Mahmoud Shahroudi, had ordered that criminal investigations of the detainees be expedited, and that all those innocent or guilty of only minor offenses be released within a week, Iranian news agencies reported.

It was the first time Ayatollah Shahroudi has addressed the detentions, though opposition figures have repeatedly made personal appeals to him to intervene.

The circle of those touched by the killings widened last week when Mohsen Ruholamini, the son of an adviser to conservative presidential candidate Mohsen Rezai, was reported by his family to have died in prison after a severe beating. Some senior members of Parliament have complained about the case. On Monday, Saeed Mortazavi, the prosecutor general of Tehran, said a special judge had been appointed to investigate the death, Iranian news agencies reported.

Repercussions continued from the political dispute over President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s promotion of a controversial ally, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, who made friendly comments about Israel last year. The issue has underscored persistent divisions among Iran’s conservatives.

More than 200 of Iran’s 290 members of Parliament signed a letter on Monday chastising Mr. Ahmadinejad, who ignored for almost a week a directive from Ayatollah Khamenei to drop Mr. Mashaei. Mr. Mashaei finally withdrew from the position as top presidential deputy on Friday, and the president promptly appointed him chief of staff.

In the letter, the lawmakers reminded Mr. Ahmadinejad of their support for him but urged him to “rectify his conduct” toward Ayatollah Khamenei, Press TV reported.

Members of Mr. Ahmadinejad’s cabinet have feuded with him over the Mashaei affair, and on Sunday he fired one of them, Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hussein Mohseni-Ejei.

The dispute may fuel further dissension this week, with some legislators warning that the president’s actions could trigger a confidence vote on his cabinet, despite the fact that only a week remains before Mr. Ahmadinejad is sworn in for a second term and must submit a new cabinet to Parliament for approval.
Robert F. Worth reported from Dubai, and Nazila Fathi from Toronto.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Iranian Leaders Urge Protections for Detained Protesters

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702541.html
Iranian Leaders Urge Protections for Detained Protesters
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [trouble at UN and Ahmadinejad not happy with his master?] [*]
TEHRAN, July 27 -- Top Iranian leaders on Monday called for greater protection for opposition demonstrators arrested during this summer's protests after at least three were reported in recent days to have died in custody. [death while being detaineed and interrogated is a significant problem in Iran] [but now with the rifts opening up between factions, it has become a serious political issue] [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702541.html
Iranian Leaders Urge Protections for Detained Protesters
By Thomas Erdbrink
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Iran] [June 12 election and overt, heavy-handed intervention by regime] [the thugocracy’s legitimacy largely as stake] [Ahmadinejad-Khamenei and parts of thugocracy have acquitted themselves badly!] [thugocracy apparently showing deference to activist in foreign-policy establishment] [Britain has replaced the US as the great satan in some sense] [SL Ayatollah Khameini tells Ahmadinejad to change latters’ pick for deputy—shows dicscord in that faction?] [trouble at UN and Ahmadinejad not happy with his master?] [*]
TEHRAN, July 27 -- Top Iranian leaders on Monday called for greater protection for opposition demonstrators arrested during this summer's protests after at least three were reported in recent days to have died in custody. [death while being detaineed and interrogated is a significant problem in Iran] [but now with the rifts opening up between factions, it has become a serious political issue] [*]

The calls reflect concern, even among Iran's ruling elite, that some of those detained are being mistreated by officials and groups operating under the authority of the powerful Revolutionary Guard Corps, which has taken an ever larger role in Iranian affairs since protests over June's disputed presidential election triggered a massive crackdown.

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, speaking through his representative on the National Security Council, called Monday for criminal acts to be handled through proper legal channels. Khamenei ordered the closure of a substandard prison facility and reminded officials that "criminal acts should be confronted by government bodies only within the framework of the law and no one can deny the legal rights of any individual," the representative, Saeed Jalili, quoted Khamenei as saying, according to the semiofficial Iranian Students News Agency.

Meanwhile, Iran's judiciary chief, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, ordered the Tehran prosecutor to decide within a week the fate of protesters detained after the election, [*]his spokesman told the Mehr News Agency. He also called for the quick release of those who have not committed serious crimes.

The Revolutionary Guard Corps, the 125,000-strong military force that also commands the volunteer Basij militia, took control of Tehran's security in the aftermath of the election. Politicians inside and outside the government have said they believe that the Revolutionary Guard has also taken the lead in handling detained protesters, and that the traditional justice system has been circumvented.

"The police and the Intelligence Ministry have said that they're not at the center of this and are not aware of who is responsible," said Hamid Reza Katouzian, a member of a parliamentary commission researching the arrests, according to the semiofficial Iranian Labor News Agency. "Those who've created such a security environment and have been going forward with military force need to be held responsible."

Mir Hossein Mousavi, the defeated presidential candidate who leads the opposition, echoed those comments Monday. "I'm sure the Justice Ministry cannot and does not have the right to visit many of the prisons," he said, according to Ghalam News, run by his supporters.

He and other protest leaders have asked the Interior Ministry for permission to hold a silent commemoration service Thursday, which marks the 40th day after the violent death of Neda [*] [what do you want to be this will not be permitted?] [*] Agha Soltan, whose final moments were captured on video and broadcast around the world. Officials say 20 protesters and seven Basij members were killed during the demonstrations. Human rights groups say the toll was far higher.

Concern for prisoners comes amid shock within Iran's political elite over the death in custody of a protester who was the son of a former top adviser in President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government. [*] [past few days’ discussions]

Mohsen Rouholamini, [*]a computer programming student who was in his 20s, was arrested July 9 during a large anti-government demonstration. Twelve days later, his family members were told they could pick up his body. Hossein Alaei, a retired Revolutionary Guard commander and friend of the Rouholamini family, wrote a dramatic open letter published on Nowruznews, a Web site close to the opposition, conveying the words of Abdolhussein Rouholamini, the father.

“When I saw his body I noticed that they had crushed his mouth. My son was an honest person. He wouldn’t lie. I’m sure that he’s given correct answers to anything they’d asked him,” the letter said. “They probably couldn’t stand his honesty and beat him until he died under torture.” [god, how heart-wrenching a comment] [*]
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

Britain Urges Afghan Political Effort

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28afghan.html
July 28, 2009
Britain Urges Afghan Political Effort
By JOHN F. BURNS [UK] [London] [Britain’s experiences in AfPak and elsewhere since 9/11 (and Britain’s 7/7/2005, 7/21/2005. 08/10/2006, July 2007…)] [uptick in Britons killed recently in AfPak] [use psci469b] [Afghanistan] [hydra] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [the price in US and allied KIAs has been high] [Britains are restless as AfPak drives on indefintely] [*]
LONDON — The British government sought to bolster fragile domestic support for the Afghan war on Monday, issuing a comprehensive policy statement emphasizing that military power alone would not be enough to guarantee the defeat of Taliban militants.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28afghan.html
July 28, 2009
Britain Urges Afghan Political Effort
By JOHN F. BURNS [UK] [London] [Britain’s experiences in AfPak and elsewhere since 9/11 (and Britain’s 7/7/2005, 7/21/2005. 08/10/2006, July 2007…)] [uptick in Britons killed recently in AfPak] [use psci469b] [Afghanistan] [hydra] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [the price in US and allied KIAs has been high] [Britains are restless as AfPak drives on indefintely] [*]
LONDON — The British government sought to bolster fragile domestic support for the Afghan war on Monday, issuing a comprehensive policy statement emphasizing that military power alone would not be enough to guarantee the defeat of Taliban militants.

The statement, which came near the end of a month in which heavy fighting has left 22 British soldiers dead and caused a political uproar here, [*]was delivered in a speech by Foreign Secretary David Miliband at NATO’s Brussels headquarters. It was essentially a restatement of a counterinsurgency concept already emphasized by President Obama: the idea that success in Afghanistan depends on political strategies that weaken the Taliban, including luring insurgents to quit or switch sides. [the circularity of it all is rather fascinating] [the British learned these counterinsurgency lessons in Malaysia mostly and more or less shared them with the Americans in Vietnam—now back to the British] [like the word game around a room, though, each time lessons passed on they loose something and gain other things in the translation-tranference] [*]

But while Mr. Miliband quoted Mr. Obama, as if to underline a united front on the war, it was also seen by some commentators as a muted signal that Britain may be reluctant to answer any new American request for an increased troop commitment in Afghanistan to match the rapid buildup of American forces there.

Earlier this year, American emissaries, including Gen. David H. Petraeus, who oversees the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, pressed Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government for a 2,000-troop increase in Afghanistan. At the time, the United States had embarked on a near doubling of its own troop commitment in Afghanistan, to a target of 68,000 later this year.

But the Brown government has sent only 800 additional troops, for a total of 9,100, and has wavered on whether it will agree to keep those troop levels after the Afghan presidential election scheduled for next month.

The increasing war toll has complicated the political calculus in Britain, as has the reluctance of other European NATO members, including France and Germany, to make comparable increases in their troop commitments or to accept more of the combat risks in Afghanistan, an issue Mr. Miliband also addressed, if obliquely, in Brussels. [*]

“People in Britain know why we all committed to this mission,” he said. “They want to know that all the members of our alliance are ready to give it the priority and the commitment it deserves. Burden-sharing is a founding principle of the alliance, the solidarity on which it is built. It needs to be honored in practice, as well as in theory.”

Underscoring the Brown government’s concern to quell public alarm at the recent deaths among soldiers, Mr. Miliband’s speech, which is available on the Foreign Ministry’s Web site, was accompanied by a Defense Ministry announcement of an end to the militarily costly “first phase” of the British offensive in Helmand Province that has led to most of the British casualties. The ministry said the emphasis was shifting to holding the cleared area, and ensuring the Taliban did not return.

The British operational commander, Brig. Tim Radford, said in a video link to London that the operation had been a success, killing, capturing or driving away most of the 500 Taliban fighters who had held an area about the size of Britain’s Isle of Wight along the banks of the Helmand River. [*]“We had a significant impact on the Taliban in this area,” Brigadier Radford said.

In a separate statement, Mr. Brown said the Helmand offensive had started to break the “chain of terror” linking Afghanistan and parts of Pakistan to Britain. That rationale for Britain’s military role in Afghanistan was restated forcefully in Brussels by Mr. Miliband, who said that Britain, aiming to deny Afghanistan as a haven for terrorists, planned on completing its mission.

“Our enemies should never doubt our determination to accomplish this mission, because we know the very high cost of failure,” he said. [*]

But the timing of the speech appeared, more than anything, to be aimed at shoring up support for the war in the face of rising public concern about the spike in British deaths, part of a wider toll in Afghanistan in July in which at least 69 allied soldiers, including 32 Americans, have been killed. That number includes the deaths of two British soldiers on Monday, bringing Britain’s monthly toll to its highest point since the war’s start in 2001.

Commentators in Britain, which has the second-largest military contingent [though only maringally so] [and in comparison to the US commitment insignificantly higher than the next largest] [*] in Afghanistan, have questioned whether the war can be won, and how long it can be sustained in the face of popular alarm. Mr. Miliband’s answer, in part, was that success will depend on a new political sensibility that treats the Taliban not as a militarily and ideologically coherent force but as “a wide but shallow coalition of convenience” that relies on cooperation between groups that is “opportunistic rather than strategic.”

Calling for “an effective grass-roots initiative to offer an alternative to fight or flight” for Taliban militants, Mr. Miliband described them as a motley alliance of “foot soldiers whom the Taliban pay $10 a day,” poppy farmers, narco-traffickers, warlords and “ordinary Afghans.” He said they dreaded the Taliban’s return but worried about the state’s ability to protect them. “They may not give active support,” he said. “But they acquiesce or turn a blind eye.”

Mr. Miliband offered few specific suggestions as to how allied forces could encourage defections. Instead, he concentrated on initiatives by Afghanistan to strip away corrupt local governments, create more economic opportunity and persuade citizens that they will be protected from a Taliban revival once coalition forces withdraw. “It is only when the cooperation, passive and active, of ordinary Afghans is removed that the insurgency will be fatally undermined,” he said. “The squeeze on the Taliban must come from within as well as without.”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Afghanistan and Taliban Reach Election Truce in District

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28kabul.html
July 28, 2009
Afghanistan and Taliban Reach Election Truce in District
By CARLOTTA GALL and SANGAR RAHIMI [Afghanistan] [hydra] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [thus far the “spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [ever since this offensive began, a couple weeks ago now, in southern Afghan. In Helmand provice, the price in US and allied KIAs has been high] [elections just weeks away now and Karzai appears to believe he has a lock] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Afghan government said Monday that it had arranged a truce with a group of Taliban in a district in northern Afghanistan in order to allow elections to go ahead on Aug. 20 [isn’t that special?] [I’m sure everything will be fine

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28kabul.html
July 28, 2009
Afghanistan and Taliban Reach Election Truce in District
By CARLOTTA GALL and SANGAR RAHIMI [Afghanistan] [hydra] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [thus far the “spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [difficult to discern whether this is part of broader spring offensive or simply incidential violence that occurs year round] [followup] [ever since this offensive began, a couple weeks ago now, in southern Afghan. In Helmand provice, the price in US and allied KIAs has been high] [elections just weeks away now and Karzai appears to believe he has a lock] [*]
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Afghan government said Monday that it had arranged a truce with a group of Taliban in a district in northern Afghanistan in order to allow elections to go ahead on Aug. 20 [isn’t that special?] [I’m sure everything will be fine now] [*] and allow development projects to proceed in the area.

Local elders negotiated the truce with the local Taliban commander in the Balamorghab district of Badghis Province, and the commander agreed to have election officials open a registration office in the area, said Ahmad Zia Siamak Herawi, a deputy spokesman for President Hamid Karzai.

The deal is one of several local arrangements election officials have managed to secure through negotiations with local elders to persuade the Taliban and other opposition groups to allow the elections to go ahead, the chief of Afghanistan’s election commission, Azizullah Ludin, said in an interview.

People wanted to participate in the elections — in particular, provincial council elections — in order to have their own representatives in power, he said, and local Taliban leaders in some places were bowing to the pressure of the communities to let them happen. [*]

The Taliban have also agreed to allow government development projects to go forward in the Balamorghab area and for construction of the main highway, which circles Afghanistan, to proceed through the district, Mr. Herawi said.

Officials were still working out how to provide security for the polling centers in the district, Mr. Herawi said. Afghan police officers are supposed to guard polling stations across the country for the elections, but the Taliban were refusing to allow the local police into Balamorghab, [those nutty Talib] [*] according to local press reports.

While local agreements have seemed possible in the north, heavy fighting in southern and eastern provinces are likely to cause widespread disruption in voting, military officials say. American and British casualties have risen sharply amid an offensive in those regions.
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

Landowners Still in Exile From Unstable Pakistan Area

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28swat.html
July 28, 2009
Landowners Still in Exile From Unstable Pakistan Area
By JANE PERLEZ and PIR ZUBAIR SHAH [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pakistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [ditto] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Even as hundreds of thousands of people stream back to the Swat Valley after months of fighting, one important group is conspicuously absent: the wealthy landowners who fled the Taliban in fear and are the economic pillar of the rural

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/world/asia/28swat.html
July 28, 2009
Landowners Still in Exile From Unstable Pakistan Area
By JANE PERLEZ and PIR ZUBAIR SHAH [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pakistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [ditto] [*]
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — Even as hundreds of thousands of people stream back to the Swat Valley after months of fighting, one important group is conspicuously absent: the wealthy landowners who fled the Taliban in fear and are the economic pillar of the rural society.

The reluctance of the landowners to return is a significant blow to the Pakistani military’s campaign to restore Swat as a stable, prosperous part of Pakistan, and it presents a continuing opportunity for the Taliban to reshape the valley to their advantage.

About four dozen landlords were singled out over the past two years by the militants in a strategy intended to foment a class struggle. In some areas, the Taliban rewarded the landless peasants with profits of the crops of the landlords. Some resentful peasants even signed up as the Taliban’s shock troops.

How many of those peasants stayed with the militants during the army offensive of the last several months, and how many moved to the refugee camps, was difficult to assess, Pakistani analysts said.

But reports emerging from Swat show that the Taliban still have the strength to terrorize important areas. The army continues to fight the Taliban in their strongholds, particularly in the Matta and Kabal regions of Swat, not far from the main city, Mingora, where many refugees have reclaimed their homes.

In those regions, the Taliban have razed houses, killed a civilian working for the police in Matta and kidnapped another, worrying counterinsurgency experts, who fear that the refugees may have been encouraged by the Pakistani authorities to go back too soon.

The rebuilding of Swat, a fertile area of orchards and forests, is a critical test for the government and the military as they face Taliban insurgencies across the tribal belt, particularly in Waziristan on the Afghanistan border.

In a sign of the lack of confidence that Mingora was secure, the Pakistani military declined a request by the Obama administration’s special envoy to Pakistan, Richard C. Holbrooke, to visit the town last week.

There was nervousness, an American counterinsurgency expert said, that the plans by the Pakistani authorities to build new community police forces in Swat would not materialize quickly enough to protect the returning civilians, who are also starved of basic services like banks and sufficient medical care.

“There is no apparatus in place to replace the army,” said an American counterinsurgency official. “The army will be the backstop.”

About two million people have fled Swat and surrounding areas since the military opened its campaign to push back the Taliban at the end of April. The United Nations said Monday that 478,000 people had returned to Swat so far, but it cautioned that it was unable to verify the figure, which was provided by the government.

Assessment trips by United Nations workers to Swat scheduled for Monday and Tuesday were canceled for security reasons, and the United Nations office in Peshawar that serves as the base for Swat operations was closed Monday because of a high threat of kidnapping, a spokesman said.

The landlords, many of whom raised sizable militias to fight the Taliban themselves last year, say the army is again failing to provide enough protection if they return.

Another deterrent to returning, they say, is that the top Taliban leadership, responsible for taking aim at the landlords and spreading the spoils among the landless, remains unscathed.

If it continues, the landlords’ absence will have lasting ramifications not only for Swat, but also for Pakistan’s most populated province, Punjab, where the landholdings are vast, and the militants are gaining power, said Vali Nasr, a senior adviser to Mr. Holbrooke, the American envoy.

“If the large landowners are kept out by the Taliban, the result will in effect be property redistribution,” Mr. Nasr said. “That will create a vested community of support for the Taliban that will see benefit in the absence of landlords.”

At two major meetings with the landlords, the Pakistani military and civilian authorities requested that they return in the vanguard of the refugees. None have agreed to do so, according to several of the landowners and a senior army officer.

“We have sacrificed so much; what has the government and the military done for us?” asked Sher Shah Khan, a landholder in the Kuz Bandai area of Swat. He is now living with 50 family members in a rented house about 60 miles from Swat. Four family members and eight servants were killed trying to fight off the Taliban, he said.

At one of the meetings, Mr. Khan said he had asked the army commanders to provide weapons so the landlords could protect themselves, as the landowners had in the past.

The military refused the request, he said, saying it would fight the Taliban. Yet Pakistani soldiers had failed to protect his lands, he said. Twenty of his houses were blown up by the Taliban after the army ordered him and his family to leave their lands on two hours’ notice last September, he said.

A letter he sent last month to Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the head of the Pakistani military, asking for compensation has gone unanswered, he said. In the meantime, one of his tenants called asking if he could plant crops on Mr. Khan’s property. He refused but had little idea what was happening back home, Mr. Khan said.

Other landlords are equally frustrated. The mayor of Swat, Jamal Nasir, fled after his father, Shujaat Ali Khan, regarded as the biggest landlord in Swat, narrowly avoided being killed by the Taliban. Mr. Nasir, a major landowner himself, now stays in his house in Islamabad.

The top guns of the Taliban are still in Swat, or perhaps in neighboring Dir, Mr. Nasir said. “These people should be arrested,” he said. “If they are not arrested, they are going to come back.”

Another landlord, Sher Mohammad, said he was still bitter that the army refused to help as he, his brother and his nephew fought off the Taliban last year for 13 hours, even though soldiers were stationed less than a mile away. Mr. Mohammad was hit in the groin by a bullet and lost a finger in the fight.

At one of the meetings with the military in Peshawar, Mr. Mohammad, a prominent politician with the Pakistan Peoples Party, said he told the officers that he was not impressed with their performance.
“They said, ‘We will protect you,’ ” he recalled. “I said, ‘We don’t trust you.’ ”
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

As Violence Hurts Business, Pakistanis Debate U.S. Help

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702652.html
As Violence Hurts Business, Pakistanis Debate U.S. Help
Restrictions Make Textile-Export Bill Useless, Some Say
By Joshua Partlow and Haq Nawaz Khan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pkistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [shocker--not[*]
PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- A concrete wall already encircles Mohsin Aziz's office, but workers are making it higher brick by brick. Kalashnikov-wielding guards shadow the industrialist everywhere he goes. A chase car tracks his black sedan through thick city traffic. [Mohsin Aziz] [*]

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/07/27/AR2009072702652.html
As Violence Hurts Business, Pakistanis Debate U.S. Help
Restrictions Make Textile-Export Bill Useless, Some Say
By Joshua Partlow and Haq Nawaz Khan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 [Pakistan] [Pakistan as central hub in AfPak wheel] [AfPak] [“spring offensive” has been relatively mild] [it feels as though US-West are all waiting for some big event] [Pakistan’s robust role in transnational war, villany, complications?] [followup] [as insurgency rages next door, various factions of Taliban and/or jihadis (al Qaeda and others) battle one with another over future direction and future command-disposition] [Pkistan’s complex relationships with al Qaeda and other jihadis (global and local)] [followup] [use psci469b] [shocker--not[*]
PESHAWAR, Pakistan -- A concrete wall already encircles Mohsin Aziz's office, but workers are making it higher brick by brick. Kalashnikov-wielding guards shadow the industrialist everywhere he goes. A chase car tracks his black sedan through thick city traffic. [Mohsin Aziz] [*]

Even with such precautions, Aziz said, his family considers him a "madman" for keeping his business in Peshawar, the violent capital of Pakistan's North-West Frontier Province. Military-imposed curfews keep laborers from his factories, and he sometimes has to beg his managers to come to work. [*]

"I tell them, 'I am here with you. I will not leave you behind, dead or alive,' " said Aziz, who manufactures matches, textiles, laminates and particleboard. "We will die together."

Bombings and kidnappings by the Taliban and criminal gangs are strangling the economic life of this metropolis adjacent to the tribal territory along the Afghan border. Businessmen have fled south to safer provinces or left the country, slashed production, laid off employees, and closed down offices.

Government statistics show that large-scale manufacturing has contracted 7.6 percent across Pakistan in the past year, while a survey by the Industrialists Association of Peshawar found a 37 percent plunge in the industrial sector here. Business associations estimate that the number of industrial jobs, the main economic lifeline, has already fallen from more than 100,000 to about 25,000. Factories that ran round-the-clock now scrape by with a single shift. [traumatic] [*]

“This is a recipe for disaster,” said Nauman Wazir, former president of the Industrialists Association. “This is going to have a spiraling effect into more unemployment and into more radicalism.”

The Obama administration has pledged to bring economic relief to these border regions dominated by Taliban and al-Qaeda fighters. In March, the president called on Congress to pass a bill that would create what are known as “reconstruction opportunity zones” to “develop the economy and bring hope to places plagued with violence.” [*]

That bill passed the House last month. It is intended to allow businesses in areas such as North-West Frontier Province, the tribal areas and a 100-mile border swath of Baluchistan in southern Pakistan to export textiles and apparel to the United States duty-free. [I don’t have a particular problem with the underlying assumption: economic liberalization will hasten political liberalization] [however, a jihad is being waged so I’d say there’s a better than even chance that the liberalization will be thwarted or at least delayed some time] [*]

But Pakistani businessmen said limits on what textiles are covered -- sought by U.S. business lobbyists -- render the bill, and its pending Senate version, largely worthless.

Many products eligible for duty-free status are not items that Pakistan produces in large quantity, according to an analysis by the Citizens Voice, a Peshawar-based think tank of business and civic leaders.

"This is ridiculous, this is not going to work, this is a non-starter," said Aleema Khan, [*] chairman of Cotton Connection, a Lahore-based firm that buys textiles for large American companies. "Everybody's rejecting it. Major industry is rejecting it. Buyers are rejecting it. This bill should not go through. The fact that they haven't done their homework is what's so scary." [I have no idea where Khan is correct or not but it’s plausible that Khan is correct; minimally, the people behind this appear to be in denial of some basic dynamics at work in NWFP and FATA] [*]

Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), one of the sponsors, said that he would support expanding the scope of products eligible for duty-free status, "so long as that does not doom the prospects of the bill."

"I always worry about making the perfect the enemy of the good. [the aphorism du jour?] [with the Bushes it was “make no mistake”] [*] It's important to get something started," Van Hollen said. "One thing the president's been clear about is that military force alone will not resolve the conflict in Afghanistan, you need to provide greater economic opportunities in these conflict-ridden regions. This is not something that happens overnight, and this is part of a sustained strategy."

Van Hollen, citing a report by the Congressional Research Service, said the 38 textile and apparel categories included in the bill account for $1.4 billion of the $2.7 billion worth of goods that Pakistan exports each year to the United States.

Businessmen in Pakistan dispute those figures. Muhammad Atif Hanif, a manager at Dubai Islamic Bank in Peshawar and a member of the Citizens Voice, said that Pakistani textile exports tend to fall into six categories -- including cotton pants, underwear, knit shirts and hosiery -- and all are excluded from the legislation. The current legislation would benefit only about $200 million of the export industry, [hum; that seems tailored to fail] [*] he said.

Said Mohsin Aziz: "We are supposed to produce swimsuits, we are supposed to produce neckties, we are supposed to produce handkerchiefs, we are supposed to produce silk gowns, which we have never produced, which we do not have the raw material for, which we do not have the expertise for. It's just a game." [*]

Most people concede that developing significant industry in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas remains a long-term goal because the region is largely ungoverned mountain territory devoid of modern property rights or legal infrastructure and on the verge of a Pakistani military invasion. [for instance, how are the buiness owners going to itemize the protection “tax” they must pay the Taliban?] [*] But trying to encourage textile investment in North-West Frontier Province also has generated skepticism here, as those industries' hubs reside in Karachi and Faisalbad, outside this province.

"It's not something they've ever done. I'm not going to buy from there, and I'm one of the most aggressive buyers in this country," Khan said.

On the ground in Peshawar, debates over U.S. help that is potentially years away are overshadowed by the threats businessmen face each day. As many as 300 people a month, mostly businessmen, have been kidnapped for ransom in the province, [*] [armored cars, body-guard caravans, gattling-gun care, …; their itemized deductions are going to be something to behold] [*] said Muhammad Ishaq, vice president of the Frontier Chamber of Commerce. Two years ago, there were 2,254 industrial companies here. Today, 594 remain, the others driven out by war and power shortages, according to the chamber.

Earlier this year, anonymous letters believed to be from the Taliban, delivered to banks, insurance companies and other businesses, demanded that employees wear traditional Islamic baggy tunics and pants, known as a salwar-kameez. [and uniforms] [*]

"I am wearing this because bankers have been threatened not to wear suits," one Peshawar banker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said of his tunic.

Ilyas Bilour, a senator and owner of a vegetable oil business in Peshawar, said he has shed 10 to 20 percent of his workforce, and the factories now operate only half the month. He moved his children and grandchildren to Islamabad to keep them safe.

"The insurance people are not covering terrorism insurance. We are ready to pay them more, much more, but they are not ready to accept our high offers," [that’s going to be rather problematic] [*] he said.

Nauman Wazir, who owns companies that produce rebar, marble and hunting weapons, has a simple strategy to weather these violent times. "I travel fully armed. AK-47s. Pistols can't save you. An AK-47 can save you. Fully loaded. I don't take chances," [they may want to swith to the lovely M16 or similarly American-crafted military hardware] [otherwise they may find themselves crosswise with certain congressmen] [on the bright side, they’re a natural constituency for America’s NRA] [perhaps the NRA can open a Peshwar chapter?] [*] he said. He knows what he's up against. A decade ago, kidnappers held him for 60 days. [I’d think this was written and inserted as comedic relief but I fear it’s serious] [*]
"Either I'm going to kill him or I'm going to get killed. I'm not having any of this kidnapping business."
© 2009 The Washington Post Company

The Lede - New York Times Blog

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/americans-arrested-for-plotting-violent-jihad-abroad/
The Lede - New York Times Blog
July 28, 2009, 10:30 am
Americans Arrested for Plotting ‘Violent Jihad’ Abroad
By Robert Mackey
DESCRIPTIONCity County Bureau of Identification/Associated Press An undated photo of Daniel Patrick Boyd. [global] [America born and bred] [US, white jihadis] [it’s hard not to see them as little more than misfits, miscreants, and malcontent] [but we’ll have to see as the case makes its way to court] [allegedly, these guys have traveled to AfPak for jihad against the US] [al Qaeda recruitment in US] [al Qaeda and other jihadis—global jihadi hydra] [al Qaeda 2.0?] [cross in govt] [see today’s govt for perspective from that exogenous set of inputs] [first reported vaguely yesterday] [use psci469b] [*]
Federal agents arrested seven men in North Carolina on Monday and charged them

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/28/americans-arrested-for-plotting-violent-jihad-abroad/
The Lede - New York Times Blog
July 28, 2009, 10:30 am
Americans Arrested for Plotting ‘Violent Jihad’ Abroad
By Robert Mackey
DESCRIPTIONCity County Bureau of Identification/Associated Press An undated photo of Daniel Patrick Boyd. [global] [America born and bred] [US, white jihadis] [it’s hard not to see them as little more than misfits, miscreants, and malcontent] [but we’ll have to see as the case makes its way to court] [allegedly, these guys have traveled to AfPak for jihad against the US] [al Qaeda recruitment in US] [al Qaeda and other jihadis—global jihadi hydra] [al Qaeda 2.0?] [cross in govt] [see today’s govt for perspective from that exogenous set of inputs] [first reported vaguely yesterday] [use psci469b] [*]
Federal agents arrested seven men in North Carolina on Monday and charged them with plotting to wage “violent jihad” outside the United States, [I imagine that’s against US laws?] [but the bigger issue is they were in AfPak to wage jihad against Americans or at least to be trained prior to waging against Serbs in former Yugoslavia] [*] according to an indictment unsealed in federal court in Raleigh, N.C. The full text of the indictment is embedded below. [I didn’t archive the indictment—perhaps in coming days depending on where this thing appears to be headed] [*]

The government charged Daniel Boyd, a 39-year-old American who traveled to Afghanistan two decades ago to fight the Soviets, with recruiting six young men, including two of his sons, to take part in a conspiracy “to advance violent jihad, including supporting and participating in terrorist activities abroad and committing acts of murder, kidnapping or maiming persons abroad.” [good lord is there no statute of limitations on jihadis against former USSR; indeed, the US govt once casually supported (at least acquiesced)] [*]

According to the indictment, members of the group practiced military tactics and the use of weapons in rural North Carolina, and traveled to Gaza, Israel, Jordan and Kosovo hoping “to engage in violent jihad.” [*]

A North Carolina newspaper, The News & Observer, reported on Monday night: “The charges are related to allegations that they helped raise money and provide training for terrorism operations in Tel Aviv, Israel.” [*] The newspaper added “Federal officials will not say where the men are being held.” [I don’t see how they can be charged militarily and thrown in military brig so it must be temporary facility until the federales work out in which disctrict court (Southern NY is my bet if they can make jurisdiction argument)] [*]

The Justice Department identified two of the suspects as Mr. Boyd’s sons Zakariya Boyd, 20 and Dylan Boyd, 22. The others are Anes Subasic, 33; Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan, 22; Ziyad Yaghi, 21 and Hysen Sherifi, 24. All are American citizens except Mr. Sherifi, who is a native of Kosovo but a permanent legal resident of the United States. [*] The Associated Press reports that “no attorneys for the men were listed in court records.” Mr. Boyd’s mother told The A.P. that she knew nothing abut the case but tat it “certainly sounds weird.” The father of Mr. Hassan declined to comment and family members of the other me were unable to be reached on Tuesday. [*]

The Justice Department’s summary of the charges lays out several apparently unsuccessful efforts by members of the group to take part in attacks in other countries: [*] [url from NYTs’ Lede was www.scribd.com/ ]

Among other acts, the indictment alleges that Daniel Boyd traveled to Gaza in March 2006 and attempted to enter Palestine in order to introduce his son to individuals who also believed that violent jihad was a personal religious obligation. Later, in October 2006, defendant Ziyad Yaghi allegedly departed the United States for Jordan to engage in violent jihad.

In June 2007, Daniel Boyd and several other defendants departed the United States for Israel in an effort to engage in violent jihad, but ultimately returned to the United States after failing in their efforts. [how did they get through Israel without getting grabbed?] [I’ve flown on El Al and they don’t dick around] [they do interviews with would-be arrival passengers on their plans, where they’ve traveled recently, so on] [I’m guessing the Israelis tailed them and either handed off to US counterparts or ranked them sufficiently harmless to drop?] [if latter, these guys are keystone jihadis and the indictment is going to have problems] [you read it here first!] [*] According to the indictment, after his return to the United States, Daniel Boyd made false statements twice to federal officials about who he had planned to meet on his trip to Israel. [bingo: Israelis handed off!] [*]

In February 2008, Daniel Boyd allegedly solicited money to fund the travel of additional individuals overseas to engage in violent jihad and in March 2008, discussed with Anes Subasic preparations to send two individuals abroad for this purpose. He allegedly accepted $500 in cash from defendant Hysen Sherifi to be used to help fund jihad overseas and later showed Sherifi how to operate an AK-47 assault weapon.

According to The News & Observer, one of Mr. Boyd’s neighbors, Charles Casale, said he was shocked by the arrest: “If he’s a terrorist, he’s the nicest terrorist I’ve ever met in my life.” The newspaper also reported:

To neighbors and friends, Daniel Boyd was a father who stopped his work at noon each day for prayer. Dylan Boyd, Daniel’s son, was a college student at N.C. State University who until last year worked as a clinical services technician at WakeMed Raleigh Campus. Mohammad Omar Aly Hassan was a newlywed; his father owns a Raleigh car dealership. [...] [note: those bracketed elipses were in orginal, or as thus, sic.] [*]

A spokesman at the Islamic Center in Raleigh said he did not know the suspects; an estimated 1,200 people attend Friday services at the center. Hassan and Yaghi both attended Al-Iman School, which shares space with the Raleigh mosque, according to former teacher Samar Hindi. Most recently, Daniel Boyd had been attending Jamaat Ibad Ar-Rahman, a mosque in Durham.

David Kris, an assistant Attorney General, described Daniel Boyd as “a veteran of terrorist training camps in Pakistan and Afghanistan who, over the past three years, has conspired with others in this country to recruit and help young men travel overseas in order to kill.”

Mr. Boyd’s history, as sketched out in the indictment, illustrates how complicated the American government’s relationship has been with Islamic fundamentalists in Afghanistan over time. Two decades ago, Mr. Boyd was reportedly a member of an Afghan-led faction that was then allied with the United States in the struggle against the Soviet Union.
According to The Associated Press:
In 1991, Boyd and his brother were convicted of bank robbery in Pakistan — accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-Islami, [incredible] [but then the USSR had not yet fully imploded so their harebrained activity was valued] [bizaare] [*] or Party of Islam. They were each sentenced to have a foot and a hand cut off for the robbery, but the sentenced was later overturned.

The wives of the men told The Associated Press in an interview at the time they were glad the truth about their husbands had finally become known. The wives said the couples had U.S. roots but the United States was a country of “kafirs” — Arabic for heathens. [Arabic for infidels, not necessarily heathens] [*]

Hezb-e-Islami, or the Islamic Party, led by the Afghan warlord Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, was one of a number groups that the United States supplied with weapons during the time Mr. Boyd was in the region. The group still exists and is still led by Mr. Hekmatyar, but it is now allied with the Taliban against American-led forces in Afghanistan. Last month, my colleague Adam Ellick reported that Kunar Province in eastern Afghanistan “is largely controlled by the Islamic Party.”

In an interview with The New York Times in 1988, Mr. Hekmatyar, described then as a “major recipient of covert American military assistance, whose aim is a ‘pure’ Islamic state,” complained, in English, that “there are people in America who are against our jihad.” [*] In what might now be seen as a sign that the American alliance with Afghan holy warriors was inherently problematic, [gee, ya think?] [what a scoop] [*] Mr. Hekmatyar told The Times in 1988 that he knew there were “people who support our struggle because they are against the Russians, not as an Islamic struggle.” He also explained that he had refused to accompany other leaders of the Islamic resistance who traveled to Washington to meet President Ronald Reagan in 1986, because “I was afraid America would compromise with Gorbachev over Afghanistan.”

While the shifting alliances in Afghanistan seem to have no relationship to the recent plots that Mr. Boyd was charged with facilitating, there was an interesting coincidence of timing. On Monday, the same day he was charged, The Guardian reported that Mr. Hekmatyar “has reportedly been approached with a deal by western intelligence agencies,” hoping to draw the Islamic Party back into a de facto alliance with the United States. [dear god; do we have any competency inside the IC?] [how can such minor, provisional-tentative stuff, leak so quickly?] [*]

The A.P. reports that during Mr. Boyd’s trial in 1991, he accused the court of being insufficiently Islamic:

In 1991 in Pakistan, Daniel Boyd and his older brother denied they were guilty of stealing $3,200 from the bank. When the sentence was imposed, Boyd shouted: “This isn’t an Islamic court. It’s a court of infidels!” [*] [let’s remember in 1991 Mr. Boyd would have been considered vaguely (if not more) patriotic for going after the Soviets whether it was legal or not] [considered by the federal government, that is] [and parts of the GOP and conservatives] [*]

When the brothers were arrested, they were accused of carrying identification showing they belonged to the radical Afghan guerrilla group, Hezb-e-